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That's often how theories start: as notions.
Don't be so hypersensitive. It's immature of you.
If Rand is wrong in her _notion_ about concepts, any _theory_ built on that _notion_ will be wrong, too.
Don't worry. That she's wrong in her epistemology in no way detracts from the heroism of Galt, Dagny, Rearden, or D'Anconia.
And what does topology have to do with any of this? Concepts obviously include mathematical ideas such as "number", "function", "continuous", "discontinuous", "discrete", "complete", "closed", "open", etc., but they are not mathematical in nature themselves. "Units" are concepts, but "concepts" are not units.