dical Center.
Teaching Room.
"Yes."
Under everyone's watchful eyes, Adam nodded, confirming Dr. Burke's suspicion.
A burst of murmurs imdiately filled the room.
"Wow!
Unbelievable!"
"He's just boasting."
"How is that even possible?"
"He even factored that in—this is too over the top."
"I don't believe it; he must have just been guessing."
"I don't believe it either!"
"Even if he was guessing, accounting for that detail is still terrifying."
Everyone was chattering away, unable to believe that Adam could pull this off, yet they were all deeply impressed by his ticulous attention to detail.
It really challenged everyone's usual way of thinking.
"Dr. Duncan, do you have any evidence to back that up?"
Dr. Burke's eyes narrowed as he questioned.
"Of course."
Adam calmly began explaining his approach.
Ever since Dr. Gray pioneered this classic surgery, countless subsequent heart surgery data have been recorded—data that he recited one after another.
They cover surgeries on children, teenagers, adults, middle-aged people, the elderly, n, won, "good n," and even intersex individuals, among others.
"Thanks to Dr. Gray's breakthrough, we now have tens of thousands of cases. For ti's sake, I won't list them all—just a few dozen as a sample."
Adam continued, "Using big data analysis, I took the heart surgery data for young girls that Dr. Burke perford and applied it to the original classic procedure, making the necessary adjustnts. Admittedly, these are just approximate theoretical figures, but given our current stage of exploration, this is as far as we can go."
The room fell silent.
The cara crew quickly snapped photos of everyone's reactions.
They were professionals who knew how rare a mont like this was.
Normally, they wouldn't take on such a small side job, but they couldn't resist the generous money Adam offered.
Now, though, they felt like they were filming a movie—the energy was infectious.
Hmm.
"We're not doing this for the money—we're doing it for the art!"
The lead photographer, clearly brimming with excitent, thought to himself.
As the saying goes, a photographer who doesn't dream of directing isn't really a good photographer!
With such a captivating subject, a charismatic lead, and this incredible, raw scene, once the footage is out, his directorial debut is guaranteed to be a smash hit.
Who wants to just be a photographer when you can be a director?
And he wasn't just daydreaming about it either.
Many great directors started out as photographers.
If others can do it, why can't he?
At that mont, he even pictured himself basking in success as a director.
No more hiding behind the cara.
No more spending free ti doing cheesy photo shoots for second-rate actresses and wannabe stars that tarnish the profession.
He could soon be discussing life, dreams, and scripts with top-tier actresses, fully imrsing himself in the lead role's mindset to create even better films.
He would be the king of the world!
"Did you record every piece of data from all the follow-up surgeries after that groundbreaking operation?"
After a while, soone asked hesitantly from behind the cara.
"I did my howork," Adam replied with a modest smile.
"Out of tens of thousands of surgeries, you rember them all?"
Another person pressed, incredulity clear in their tone.
"I have a pretty good mory," Adam replied modestly.
"And from all that data, you just casually derived all these conclusions?"
Yet another voice questioned.
"I'm pretty good at math—I'm sensitive to numbers," Adam said, even more self-effacingly this ti.
He was really keeping humble now.
In the realm of mathematics, he was just getting started—a true newbie, so to speak.
Well, for Peggy, that's just the way he is…
Silence fell over the room again; many were simply dumbfounded.
Damn it!
You think you're good?
And you call that "good"?
Then what are we?
Trash?
What happened next was even more explosive.
Every ti Adam proposed a new extension of the theory—expanding on either a hypothetical or a real branch surgery with the legendary Alice Gray—soone would imdiately jump in with a tricky, off-the-wall question.
It was like the hottest trend on the internet, the first to break the news!
They suspected Adam was just showing off.
All of what had happened earlier seed too ticulously planned.
No one could be that extraordinary!
In their world, there was simply no room for a peer as brilliant as him!
So, unmasking Adam as a fraud beca the unspoken goal for most.
They bombarded him with every possible question they could think of.
If Adam failed to answer even one, it would prove their point—and they'd finally feel validated.
But to their astonishnt, no matter what they asked, Adam answered each question swiftly and accurately.
This didn't seem pre-planned at all.
After all, even they didn't know what questions would co next, and so queries even veered off-topic entirely.
"Could it be?"
"Could it be?"
"Could it be?"
That classic exclamation echoed in everyone's mind.
Even if they were reluctant to admit it, the only explanation was that Adam truly was a genius beyond belief.
An intern's theoretical knowledge was unbelievably vast—almost to an absurd extent.
Could a true top-tier genius really be this advanced?
"Earlier, Dr. Gray said that Adam's theoretical knowledge rivals anyone's, and his technical skills are on par with a newly promoted attending—I have no doubt about that."
George, seated in the front row, murmured, "Now I see, Dr. Gray truly is one of a kind. Her insight is unmatched—I'm convinced."
This rapid-fire Q&A session was the ultimate test of one's true theoretical prowess.
When senior doctors lead rounds with interns, why do they exude so much authority?
It's because the interns must study hard just to be able to answer, while the seniors effortlessly field questions off the cuff.
Sotis, even when the interns know they're right, they hesitate to challenge the seniors publicly.
They're afraid that a senior might ask a question they hadn't even considered, exposing their ignorance.
After all, dicine is profoundly intricate.
For the sa condition, there are countless interpretations.
Oncologists see tumor symptoms.
Immunologists see immune responses.
Neurologists see neurological issues.
Until a definitive diagnosis is made and treatnt proves effective, no one can be absolutely sure.
Until then, whoever can best explain the condition and exude the most confidence—convincing patients and peers alike—becos the authority, gaining the upper hand.
That's how technical authority is established, along with the rules that co with it!
"Excellent! Excellent!"
The photographer with directorial dreams kept filming, shouting excitedly, "Who else? Co on, more! Don't stop!"
But after that round of rapid-fire questioning, everyone was completely stumped by Adam.
Their minds went blank—they couldn't think of another question, left only in sheer disbelief.
ps: Thanks to my beat-up phone for the tip!
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