Сan an essay grader detect depth?

Tiana

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Feb 23, 2026
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I’m currently taking a really intense philosophy 300-level course, and we just had our first paper due. It was all about existentialism and the concept of "bad faith." I poured my soul into it, trying to connect the texts to modern social media culture.

Before submitting, I, like everyone else, tossed it into the standard essay grader for a final spit-shine. It gave me a solid score on structure and grammar, which was fine. But it flagged my conclusion as "needing more supporting evidence." And that got me thinking... can an algorithm really tell if an argument about existential dread is fully "supported"? 🤔

It feels like the grader is optimized for STEM or business papers where everything is clean and evidence-based. In my humanities bubble, sometimes the point is the idea, not just the citation. I ended up adding a quote from a different philosopher to appease the bot, but it felt a little cheap.

Does anyone else feel like these tools force us to over-explain, sucking the soul out of more abstract arguments? Or am I just using it wrong? How do you balance pleasing the algorithm with keeping your intellectual spark alive?
 
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They look for clear thesis statements, topic sentences, and explicit evidence. Philosophy papers, especially on abstract concepts like bad faith, don't always fit that mold.

Here's the thing: use the grader for mechanics, ignore it for content. If it says your grammar is fine, great. If it flags your conclusion as unsupported, read it yourself and decide if you think it needs more. You're the philosopher, not the bot.

Also, adding a quote just to appease it? We've all done it. 😅 Just don't let the algorithm dumb down your ideas. Your professor will appreciate depth over checkbox-filling.
 
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