bmrohrs. Tlus is howweinalresense oi the hshspeeles iii streams, and the bird species in a tree. Each has its place in a set or order or branches, on the bark or slems,or the leatlaounae oi lhetree Thu order, or sizlrhmdion change, produces physlsal, mm, and organic sens. Not unly species change with order, but so does behaviour We cannot get n riot oi one person, and iewer than I5 rarely clap to applaud as an audience, when we cheretore come to construct hlerarchles, the rules ot order should guide in An array ot orders ls observed in a wide range oi phenomena such as human settleli tire, numbers in social hierarchies, trophic levels trood pyraoiidsl, and the sire oi animals in allied woluglral lamil es The size ot the rnctor itselt ttrmes 3 tor river branches) changes with the dimensions oi the system ttlrnes is int oophre pyramidst. Physlnl entitles horn protons to uniyerses display such order, with a consequent increase in the ratio, dirnensions, and behaviours associated with size change tginnl mid dwart stars behave very dtlterentlyl As designers. we need to study and apply branching potterns to roads or trails, and lo beaware of the stable orders 0! such things ns human settlements, or we may be m conilrct both with orderly llow tern we increase the stre ot a highway and not alter all m-ds’), with settlement Slze tvillages are eonseryanve at about the low-people order, and unstnble much below or above tlul numberi, with sequences lit drrn spillways, and (tin: with the numbers 0! people admitted to tunctionrl hierarchies where intorrnalion rs passed in both directions We can b appropriate or inappropriate systems by choosing parncular orders. but we do better to snrdy and apply appropriate and sublesize and lastorclesses torspeeih constructs For example, in designing a Village, we should study the orders oi soe oi settlements, and choose one ol ttese This nae-ides the number and types oi servlees and the occupations rueded, which in turn decides the space and types of shops and etriees tor a tillage ol thnl sine, and the access network needed. in human systems, we have contused the order oi hierarshtcal hrncoon with rtahrs and power, as though a treestem were less important than the Iuvn in total. We have made 'htghc'r" mean desirabts, as though the finflns were less to be desired than the palm ot the hand What we should recognise is that each part needs the other, and that none runcrtons without the others. when we remove a dominant animal horn a bah-viomal hierarchy, another is created (mm lower orders When we remavz subordinates, others are created horn within the dominants. 5o H is with soeains. Ihus, we cln see how rivers change their whole regime ti we alter one aspect We should also see that water is o/the whole. not to be thought 0! in terms oi its psrts Thus we reiute the concept oi strho and ateert thatoi [unwell it is not what ynu are, it is what you do in relation to the socrety you choose to litre or. We need each other, and it is a reclprtxal need wherever we have a tuncoon tn relanon to each other LIE CLASSIFICATION OF EVENTS All events are susceptible to classirieation over . vanety oi characterisocs, and as, lot example, clouds and galaxies have their pattern-names, so do "why other phenomena Some basic ways to classrty events in a lullhed system are A NATURE. Al Explosive disintegration, erosion, impact, ix“ gm“: integrabon, constructron, translanon A} 92mm. tdea,ereatioe thought, insight 3 STAGE. Bl, mm 0n|y tungerrnrnoted seed. unexplored idea, unexploded bornbl 81 Wothotuhon b3 Completed tgrowtb and expansion ceasedl, rrtieulaled tat Mus tdirintegratioe. replaced or treated by new events) doartioilated c DIMENSION. CI gunmen phenomena), curves :1 M tsurlace phenomenal, tessellae, dendrites (3 Three tsohd phenomena), trees c4 5w trnotring solid phenomenal, includes the lunedirnenston c- More tconreplual phenomenal models oi particles or lorces, states oi energy D LOCA‘HON m. Generating across equrepolential surlaces trtortru at real in Withihmedia tweather "humal" systems). in msuflam at amorso (trees) D‘. mm (mm: explosions and organrsrnst, D5 m loested out or normol drniensrons ot spaesLnrne By extending nnd applying these categories, all events can be given short annotations, ee. 'Asiphng :AZ,BZ,C3,D3 . A tailing bomb rs AI, BLCA, uz. 4.19 TIME AND RELATIVITY IN THE MODEL As we see the seed as the origrn ot the nee, so we urn broaden our view, and our dimensions. and VRW the tree I! the surrent time-locus o1 its own genealogy 93