Few books can have undergone so many re-evaluations as this one, which has developed a fresh approach to terms that, in recent years, the author had grown accustomed to more or less taking for granted, never imagining that one day they would undergo such extensive re-evaluating as has transpired in this, arguably his most comprehensively exacting and logically significant work to-date, the overall significance of which, besides the aforementioned factors, is also due to extent to which certain antitheses, like life and death, heathen and Christian, energy and gravity, have been interpreted from a standpoint owing more to the inherent logic of this project than at first appear to be the case, with credible conclusions, so far as we are concerned, that remind one that dualism, in one guise or another, was always at the core of John O’Loughlin’s approach to philosophy, even if the old class- and plane-oriented dualities of the order of noumenal and phenomenal, derived in some measure from Kant, Schopenhauer, and other such philosophers, have here undergone a reappraisal, or re-evaluation, that, similar to other such terms, renders them much less general and correspondingly much more particular, particular, that is, in relation to specific gender-based contexts characterized as being either noumenal or phenomenal on both absolute and relative terms, with due modifications of just how those alternative modes of noumenality and phenomenality should be described. – A Centretruths editorial.