Here, at last, is the logical culmination – one might even say apotheosis – of John O'Loughlin's decades-long pursuit of philosophical perfection, and although one would be hard-pressed to find anything (outside his own works) remotely akin, much less logically superior, to it in the entire history of philosophy, one could not expect it to appeal to more than a tiny handful of people – a few of the 'Few' – given the structural complexities that his uniquely comprehensive approach to philosophical logic entails, even without the addition of concepts like space, time, volume, and mass or, for that matter, being, doing, giving, and taking (not to mention an explicit reference to moderate ecclesiastic and extreme secular permutations), that this thinker has omitted from what is arguably his greatest philosophical achievement, having already dealt with these and other such concepts in earlier works. Here, then, is the sequential antidote to Randomized (also 2023), the author's previous title, and it must surely be, even without the aforementioned categories, the most comprehensive assessment of the atomic and pseudo-atomic dichotomies underlying class and gender ever undertaken by the human mind. – A Centretruths Editorial