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The phrase "a collection of arguments" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a group or set of reasons or points made to support a particular position or viewpoint.
Example: "In her essay, she presented a collection of arguments to advocate for environmental conservation."
Alternatives: "a set of arguments" or "a series of arguments".
Exact(5)
Hence, as the preceding discussions show, Moore's legacy is primarily a collection of arguments, puzzles and challenges.
Finally, on the silliness point, ID has a collection of arguments that are just as silly as the creation scientists' arguments about dinosaur footprints and the Second Law of Thermodynamics.
The "proof" consisted of statistical analysis of racial differences in IQ, and a collection of arguments based essentially on twin studies interpreted to show that IQ is an inherited trait.
Science content is here used as a collection of arguments, rather than as data or evidence to be weighed.
Show them that history isn't just a set of facts, but a collection of arguments about the meaning of past events.
Similar(54)
Sextus' treatises on logic thus are not simply a collection of individual arguments against various dogmatic theories.
This traditional case for the divinity of Jesus and the Holy Spirit may be best construed not as a collection of deductive arguments, but rather as an inference to the best explanation, an attempt to infer what best explains all the biblical texts considered together.
The complaint is a collection of weak arguments that the law is hurting gun sales, is reducing attendance at shooting competitions and insults common guns by calling them "assault weapons".
Definition 7 Let S ⊆ 2 A be a collection of sets of arguments and let I ⊆ 2 P be a collection of interpretations.
There, the arguments between "scientific creationists" and real scientists have resulted in the creation of a vast collection of arguments and facts showing that evolution is in fact observable, and, in a word, true.
There is a famous collection of arguments from the pioneering days of computer science to the effect that any device able to carry out every one of the entries on a certain relatively short list of elementary logical operations could, in some finite number of steps, calculate the value of any mathematical function that is calculable at all.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com