It's not mentioned, but the author makes use of it: bullet points for clarity.
Paragraphs can "hide" key information that needs to be referenced more than once, because the info location is based on how words fit into the paragraph instead of by importance.
This is an important observation. Lists embedded in looong sentences deformatted into text paragraphs lead to the dreaded MEGO syndrome.
If a list is important enough that the reader will want to refer back to it later, then by all means format it _as a list_ in order to aid subsequent visual reacquisition.
Paragraphs can "hide" key information that needs to be referenced more than once, because the info location is based on how words fit into the paragraph instead of by importance.