If you meant the Gedlee article, I read that, but to understand most of how he develop the Gm metric I will have to brush up on Taylor and Fourier as well as partial derivatives, that I may or may not be willing to do. I am certainly interested in researching the topic further regardless. From my limited understand so far of what he has demonstrated is that THD and even IMD are not good predictors of sound quality. That does not contradict my own belief based on my understanding of the theories behind and years of experience in auditioning all kinds of mid to high end amps. In my previous posts I was simply saying that if THD is as low as 0.05% or less, there is no point worry about the individual harmonic components. I highly doubt Gedlee would be concerned with the harmonic contents for amps with specified and measured THD to be less than as high as 0.05% or even 0.1%, 20-20,000 Hz from fractional output to rated output. If I know him I would ask him myself but I don't so I am guessing.
I would also guess that if THD is higher than 1% (just an arbitrary number I can think of) then the make up of that 1%, i.e. the harmonic components, might be a factor significant enough for his metric. Again, I may have misunderstood a lot, but for now my impression is that for well design class AB amps nowadays, THD spec is practically irrelevant. The only reason I would still aim for those with very low THD specs is exactly to try and avoid excessive high order harmonics that get hidden by the THD number. To be clear, I agreed with you since your first post on the higher order harmonics resulting from negative feedback is not a good thing. I am simply of the opinion that since THD is the total, so in terms of Total = 2nd+3rd+4th+5th+........nth order harmonics, each component, whether it be 2nd, 3rd, 7th, 11th, will not be greater than Total. So if total is 0.05% I won't worry about any of the components regardless of the order. I have been saying this consistently, if you say it is not correct then we can certainly agree to disagree.