Badger, I agree. That's why I have said earlier, "as you have written in the book, the mass principle can tell us when to stop tillering and even when to start scraping the side instead of the belly, as doing so would change the mass much more without affecting the draw weight too much."
Believe it or not, I think we can milk the mass principle a little more than we have done so far. I suspect it is implicitly used in the sound bow design principles. But saying that "the distribution of the mass is determined by width only" seems to be too blunt. In the pyramid style bow, the distribution of mass is usually determined by width. If so, we can use the way where energy is stored in a bow limb (pp. 116-117 of TBB4) to set the proper width of each sections, according to the mass principle. But in an ELB style bow, we might use the thickness instead. In both cases, we will be using the mass principle to put the proper amount of mass in a particular section as required by the amount of work it has to do.