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The phrase "by virtue of its existence" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
Example: By virtue of its existence, the company was able to secure millions of dollars in funding.
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A chore handed down from generation to generation, rewarding only by virtue of its being unpleasant.
But it is also, by virtue of its very existence, prima facie evidence of courageous resistance in the face of such threats.
While this journal will deal with the subject matter of creating 'global public goods for health', it will also by virtue of its very existence, contribute toward that process.
It implies, in a way that my intellect resists but my heart is willing to entertain, that the terrific annual to-do involving lilies, hymns and dexterous rabbits is, just by virtue of its continued existence, not an absurd, unwarranted phenomenon.
Hence, if one were to compare two beings, both equally great in all respects except that one exists and one does not, the one that does not exist, by virtue of its non-existence, is lacking a predicate that contributes to the greatness of the other.
Regardless of the crude and dubious content a storm in a teacup from a liberal, Western standpoint what is certain is that Tan's attention-seeking part business strattention-seeking part, part provocation—is, businesse virtue of itstrategynce, an impartant test of Malaysia's maturation, its ability to tolerate dissenting opinion.
Avicenna explains the superiority of a highest type of efficient cause as follows: Where something is such that, whenever it exists, it produces the existence of something else by virtue of its own essence, and where its effect exists after absolute nonexistence and is permanent, then that thing has a higher claim to causality than other things.
Furthermore by virtue of its nonlinearity assumptions, it can adequately capture all types of peptide classes.
Though during subsequent years and until today newer types of hard plastics came into existence to replace hard rubber, the hard rubber industry continued to stay in its position of importance by virtue of its unique characteristics, the main one being its chemical resistance and its extensive use in the process industries.
When something has been rescued from the nearly endless ocean of expendable material populating the planet, its very existence suddenly becomes something lovely and— by virtue of its fixedness— extraordinary.
The "by virtue of its rotating scaffold" argument sounds logical, but is it also thermodynamically true?
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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