Leo+DadMade for Leo
Levels of Organisation
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Where the Levels Come From

Before any rules, let's see the one idea that explains how a body is built — by zooming out from a single cell all the way to a whole you.

NESA SC4-LIV-01 The doorway into living systems

Play Drag the zoom slider from one cell out to a whole human. Watch each level build out of the one below.
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Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

Here's the whole idea in one breath: life is built in nested layers, each one made of the layer below it, and each doing a bigger job than the parts inside it. You're not one solid lump and not a random bag of bits — you're a tidy stack of levels.

Take Your Own Beating Heart

Zoom right in on your heart and you find it's made of countless tiny cells — heart-muscle cells, each a living unit doing its own little job. Gather a crowd of the same kind of cell working together and you've got a tissue — muscle tissue, a sheet of squeeze. Stack different tissues into one structure with a job and you've got an organ — the heart itself. Team that organ up with vessels and blood and you've got an organ system — the circulatory system. And all your systems running together make one whole living thing: the organism, you. Same body the whole way; you only changed how far back you stood.

Say it plainly: the five levels, smallest to biggest, are cell → tissue → organ → organ system → organism. Each level is built from many copies of the level below, and does a job none of those smaller parts could do alone.

The One Idea: Each Level Is Made of the One Below

Nothing in that ladder is a brand-new substance. A tissue is just a pile of similar cells; an organ is just a few tissues arranged together; a system is just organs working as a team. The magic is that putting the parts together unlocks a bigger job. One muscle cell can twitch. A whole heart, built from those cells, can pump blood around your entire body for eighty years without a day off.

That jump — small part, bigger job, every step up — is the engine of this topic. Drag the slider in the toy from “cell” out to “organism”. Same living thing, five views: you're only changing the zoom, and the level names itself as you go. That's the whole idea, and everything else is just learning to read the ladder both ways.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

If a tissue is just a crowd of cells, what does the crowd manage that one cell can't?

Where else in your body could you climb the same five levels — say, starting from a stomach cell?