|  | The Unified
        Concept is that which requires a minuscule of faith as defined within Conceptualism.
 The Unified Concept is that which manifests between a singularity, Oneness, and Reality.  This manifestation is simply
        described as motion and its antithesis, which is motionlessness. 
        Because of the nature of a singularity this motion is prescribed and
        heuristically defined by the  Brunardot
        Theorem.
 
 An  Ephemeloid and a  Coalescent are the simultaneous, seminal
        manifestations that occur from the phenomena of  the Unified
        Concept.
 
 The Unified Concept describes the seminal pulse, a Coalescent,
        consisting of two juxtaposed, hyper-relativistic, syncopated,
        oscillating solitons; and, the seminal structure, referred to as an
        Ephemeloid, which is the resultant structure of three forms of
        oscillations as generated by six  Coalescents as heuristically described
        by Infinity lines and Natural Brunardot
        Ellipses.
 
 The direction of the pulsation of the phenomena of the moving phenomena, outward and
        inward, is conventionally described as a plus- or minus-charge.
 
 [Historical Note: The Unified Concept (the 
		forerunner of "String" Theory) was first
        expressed to Professor Philip Morrison in his Ithaca, New York office in
        the spring of 1955 shortly before the death of Albert Einstein.]
 
 Thank you for your interest.  If required, E-mail for prompt assistance with this
        difficult definition.
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