Harrison Clark pondered for about five seconds.
But in the end, he didn't stand up to explicitly support Dr. Ethan Evans's view, but only ambiguously said, "Dr. Ethan Evans's analysis has some validity and is consistent with my personal guesswork, but there is no conclusive evidence at present. The mysteries Dr. Ethan Evans said I saw that others couldn't see, those don't exist."
"I have just integrated the achievements of my predecessors and added my own bold speculations to draw these conclusions. But since I named my book the 'Madman's Conjecture', it means that these theoretical findings are my very presumptuous conjectures, and they still need your joint efforts to verify or falsify them in the coming years."
His words were very cautious and did not endorse Ethan Evans's view.
Of course, this once again demonstrated his audacity.
He openly admitted that the knowledge in the field of physics and biology in 'The Madman's Conjectures Collection' was unexamined speculation.