Thank you Edward, that helps. I can sense that I'm not going to really get it until I do it and find the real world benefits in my own world. I will begin.
So a child, through cloning, can also be parent of its parent? And a sibling can also be parent of another sibling? If I grasp this correctly then, the only thing that a node cannot be is its own parent or its own child? So this deliberately and fruitfully breaks the confinement and limitation that is inherent in a strict hierarchical structure. And this enables, rather than stultifies or confuses creativity/productivity/order. Exactly what I'm looking for, and that few if any others do. Is that pretty much the power of the Leo model? I'm not complaining. I can see that it's simplicity and complexity in harmony and once you bring your mind to operate this way you don't have to comprehend the complexity itself, only the simple principles by which it operates (at least I believe that's something like what will happen). But my next question is, what other fundamental operative principles do I need to grasp with Leo? I am probably premature asking this before I've mobilized what you've given me. Andy -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "leo-editor" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to leo-editor+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/leo-editor/7ea01cbc-ee4e-47ad-9ca0-e9f7ea2302dc%40googlegroups.com.