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The phrase "as is often argued" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referencing a common viewpoint or assertion that is frequently discussed or debated.
Example: "As is often argued, the impact of climate change is becoming increasingly evident in our daily lives."
Alternatives: "as is frequently claimed" or "as is commonly stated".
Exact(11)
But to conclude, as is often argued today, that all such values are entirely emergent with human consciousness or culture that is, not present at all at lower levels of complexity is unwarranted.
Could similar results - if, indeed, we get results - really be achieved by video conference, as is often argued by the doubters?
If data is the new oil, as is often argued, then the personal data that these companies exploits should be treated as the property of citizens which the state is entitled to tax for our collective benefit.
Agents cannot smooth non-traded goods productivity shocks, but if these are relatively small (as is often argued to be the case) then traded goods consumption smoothing will lead to smoothing of the intra-temporal price of traded and non-traded goods.
Furthermore, Aristophanes' depiction of rhetoric and of Athenian democratic institutions indicates that he fundamentally supports the Athenian democracy and not, as is often argued, oligarchic opposition to it.
"They are dealing with what appears to be a population, not just some 'freaks,' as is often argued in the Flores debate," he says.
Similar(49)
Just as it is often argued that the truth-predicate is tenseless and timeless, so it is sometimes argued or assumed that "obtains" is tenseless and timeless.
Sometimes it may even be beneficial, since, as it is often argued, some types (and amounts) of suffering can lead to personal growth, self-discovery, and a range of other essential components of a life well lived.
Maternal request is often argued as one of the key forces driving this increase.
2. In the patterning modeling of BMP signaling pathways, it is often argued as a simplification strategy that omitting the step of recruitment of a Type II receptor to a bound BMP Type I receptor complex doesn't affect the outcomes of patterning models [ 4, 17, 23, 24].
As to the first part, it is often argued that all there is to the notion of truth is what is given by the formula "'p' is true if and only if p".
More suggestions(4)
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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