An intellectual recluse who declared war on progress, it wasn't the bombs that interested the Great Detective, but the ideas behind them. He mapped Kaczynski's targets and saw a philosophical outline, not chaos. "He writes not to terrorize," he declared, "but to evangelize." In that cabin in Montaana, the Great Detective found the root of the issue: not madness, but clarity gone dark. He sketched not just the man's movements, but the mind's descent. With this, he deduced the psychology of the Unabomber. "Kaczynski knew what he was doing. He wasn't insane, just misguided. Nature outside his cabin affected him negatively. This led him to believe that the world was fundamentally evil and needed correction to restore what he thought to be peace. Thus, he became an ecoterrorist driving the world into anarchy and madness, not because he wanted to be a leader or example, but because he just wanted to watch it burn." After realizing this, the Great Detective claimed the case was closed, and a few years later Kaczynski had passed away in jail.