If one were to have a certain given arbitrary combination of different general genre of substringular fields to interact with each other in a Yukawa-based manner, that is both of one general manner and of one general tense of a collision -- particularly if such a respective interaction were to be of a Gliosis-related manner, -- then, this will here tend to form a general genus of both the composition and the development of both a set of correlative cohomological eigenstates, as well as a set of correlative cohomological eigenindices, over time. Yet, if one were to now, instead, to have a different given arbitrary combination of different general genre of substringular fields, to interact with each other in a Yukawa-based manner, that is here to be of the one general manner and of the one general tense of a collision that is otherwise similar to both the earlier so-stated general manner and the earlier so-stated general tense of such a Yukawa interaction -- particularly if such a respective interaction were to be of a Gliosis-related manner, -- then, this will then tend to form, what will here be a different general genus of both the composition and the development of both a set of correlative cohomological eigenstates, as well as a set of correlative cohomological eigenindices, over time, than what the other combination of colliding general genre of substringular fields would thence work to form.
I will continue with the suspense later! To Be Continued! Sincerely, Samuel David Roach.
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