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Discover LudwigThe phrase "the simple assertion" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a straightforward statement or claim that does not require further elaboration or complexity. Example: "In his argument, he made the simple assertion that all humans are inherently good."
Exact(7)
But Hausner's message is the simple assertion of strangeness; her use of social peculiarity in the interest of a deliberately attenuated trick of a story is an art-house parallel to the spontaneous sideshow weirdness of reality television.
John Templeton Jnr, president of the Templeton Foundation, said: "The questions Lord Rees raises have an impact far beyond the simple assertion of facts, opening wider vistas than any telescope ever could.
But most troubling, most scary, was the simple assertion that "compassion is wrong", mainly because it can resonate, with such a lazy and an easy chime, with otherwise diffident, right-thinking people.
However, what remains beyond question is the simple assertion that greater entrepreneurial resources continuously and consistently enhance productivity growth.
On the basis of these and other difficulties, many conclude that the appeal to agent-causation provides no more insight into autonomy than the simple assertion that we can sometimes govern the causal efficacy of our own motives.
The MOCA show is organized in a loose, thematic manner that bunches artists together with associations of context and era - with the simple assertion that each of the artists has made a name for themselves in L.A. since the early 1970s.
Similar(53)
Consequently, the simple assertions we mainly hear are heavily pre-selected, which lends credibility to the claim that our response to ordinary testimony is typically acceptance.
From that simple assertion early Christians could begin to complicate the search for essence.
There are, however, problems of interpretation with this simple assertion.
In discussions about financing the SDGs, one simple assertion is repeated – that most of the money required will not come from the public sector but from private investment, $2.5tn£1.9tntn) according to the OECD.
Much of the vehemently negative reaction to the Geithner plan boils down to a simple assertion: the plan is bad because it maintains the fiction that the banks are okay, instead of insolvent, and because it's meant to keep them afloat, rather than simply nationalizing them.
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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