-2. Substitution; using alpha-conversion and other strategies
-3. Conversion versus reduction
-4. Eta reduction and "extensionality"
-5. Different evaluation strategies (call by name, call by value, etc.)
-6. Strongly normalizing vs weakly normalizing vs non-normalizing; Church-Rosser Theorem(s)
-6. Lambda calculus compared to combinatorial logic
-
-7. Encoding pairs (and triples and ...)
-8. Encoding booleans
-9. Church-like encodings of numbers, defining addition and multiplication
-10. Defining the predecessor function; alternate encodings for the numbers
-11. Homogeneous sequences or "lists"; how they differ from pairs, triples, etc.
-12. Representing lists as pairs
-13. Representing lists as folds
-14. Typical higher-order functions: map, filter, fold
-
-15. Recursion exploiting the fold-like representation of numbers and lists ([deforestation](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deforestation_%28computer_science%29), [zippers](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipper_%28data_structure%29))
-16. General recursion using omega
-17. The Y combinator(s); more on evaluation strategies
-
-18. Introducing the notion of a "continuation", which technique we'll now already have used a few times
+1. Substitution; using alpha-conversion and other strategies
+1. Conversion versus reduction
+1. Eta reduction and "extensionality"
+1. Different evaluation strategies (call by name, call by value, etc.)
+1. Strongly normalizing vs weakly normalizing vs non-normalizing; Church-Rosser Theorem(s)
+1. Lambda calculus compared to combinatorial logic<p>
+1. Encoding pairs (and triples and ...)
+1. Encoding booleans
+1. Church-like encodings of numbers, defining addition and multiplication
+1. Defining the predecessor function; alternate encodings for the numbers
+1. Homogeneous sequences or "lists"; how they differ from pairs, triples, etc.
+1. Representing lists as pairs
+1. Representing lists as folds
+1. Typical higher-order functions: map, filter, fold<p>
+1. Recursion exploiting the fold-like representation of numbers and lists ([[!wikipedia Deforestation (computer science)]], [[!wikipedia Zipper (data structure)]])
+1. General recursion using omega
+1. The Y combinator(s); more on evaluation strategies<p>
+1. Introducing the notion of a "continuation", which technique we'll now already have used a few times