My suspicion of points goes deep yet I could not comprehend the
  relationship of regions to points, because regions often _still_
  utilized points, which was maddening. But now I can see it: the
  REGION becomes the primitives and any points are derived _as
  necessary_ for their pragmatic purpose but no longer need to
  serve as "fixed points in the heavens". === Oh
  [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheaf_%28mathematics%29 is
  something I like. The concepts 'clicked' well with me. Well, you
  know _far far_ more about any of this than I do. I just
  understand what I can. I'm not anywhere near your field of study
  - or any really. But I like to comprehend the 'gists' of things.
  I like to be able to understand just enough of a concept or set
  of concepts to be able to be able to explain _some form_ of it
  using a short story, a thought experiment, imagination, a
  demonstration. I don't strive for precision, but I do strive for
  accuracy. "Low precision, high accuracy". This way, if someone
  is interested in learning more, they'll be in the correct
  'range' but if not, I'll know that I at least hadn't misled them
  to a precise but inaccurate direction.   =   ==thanks to andrei
  who wrote== "From points to regions In standard general
  relativity*and, indeed, in all classical physics*space (and
  similarly time) is modelled by a set, and the elements of that
  set are viewed as corresponding to points in space. However, if
  one is *suspicious of points**whether of spacetime, of space or
  of time (i.e. instants)*it is natural to try and construct a
  theory based on *regions* as the primary concept; with
  *points**if they exist at all*being relegated to a secondary
  role in which they are determined by the *regions* in some way
  (rather than regions being sets of points, as in the standard
  theories). So far as we know, the first rigorous development of
  this idea was made in the context of foundational studies in the
  1920s and 1930s, by authors such as Tarski. The idea was to
  write down axioms for regions from which one could construct
  points, with the properties they enjoyed in some familiar theory
  such as three-dimensional Euclidean geometry. For example, the
  points were constructed in terms of sequences of regions, each
  contained in its predecessor, and whose *widths* tended to zero;
  (more precisely, the point might be identified with an
  equivalence class of such sequences). The success of such a
  construction was embodied in a representation theorem, that any
  model of the given axiom system for regions was isomorphic to,
  for example, R^3 equipped with a structured family of subsets,
  which corresponded to the axiom system*s regions. In this sense,
  this line of work was *conservative*: one recovered the familiar
  theory with its points, from a new axiom system with regions as
  primitives."

References

  Visible links
  1. https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FSheaf_%2528mathematics%2529&h=UAQGEIDLk