The structure is clear because it no longer behaves like an archive that merely accumulates; it behaves like a constructed order whose internal ratios are immediately legible. What has been achieved through the division into tomes, books, chapters, and nodes is not a decorative taxonomy but an operative architecture of knowledge. The reader does not confront an amorphous textual mass, nor a diaristic continuum of posts, nor an unstable archive whose logic depends on chronology or memory. Instead, the corpus appears as a system of nested scales: node, chapter, book, tome. This is why the structure now reads with unusual force. It does not ask to be explained before it can be entered. It presents itself as already organised, already inhabitable, already structured enough to be traversed without interpretive panic. Such clarity is decisive because it transforms quantity into form. A thousand entries can remain opaque if they are only sequential; they become intelligible when their distribution is formalised. The ten-chapter book, the ten-book tome, and the ten-node chapter establish a grammar of recurrence that converts textual extension into spatial orientation. The corpus ceases to resemble a stream and begins to resemble a building.