Ids are not just a different way of writing. They are a way of representing thoughts. For me they entail a stronger visual imagery aspect to thought. See below where “it has good aspects and bad aspects” is conveyed in one image. This is what (automatically) occurred to me along with the verbal thought. It is a paraideographic image, a diagram using ids as constituents. Notice I dispense with “it has” and “aspects” (points) — they are implicit. The idea shown in the 2nd item is: “it doesn’t matter” is semantically equal to “it is (all) the same.” And the last one, in which I visually conceptualize the idea that “no” and “yes” are tools of control works for me — it is useful.
