The survey instrument rolled out as part of comprehensive soldier fitness was so poorly designed that it doesn't even ask questions you would ask to find out if soldiers have depression and PTSD. I would say that the best evidence available suggests it does nothing. Could it do some harm? Maybe. But they've just never really tested these questions carefully and empirically. It was an incredibly botched rollout.
Over the past decades, many social science studies have promised simple answers to complex problems. In his latest book, The Quick Fix: Why Fad Psychology Can't Cure Our Social Ills, Singal describes how many of these solutions fail because the findings they are based on turn out to be wrong or misleading.
In this week's conversation, Yascha Mounk and Jesse Singal sit down to discuss the reproducibility crisis in social science, whether to be skeptical about implicit bias training, and how to differentiate real solutions from illusory quick fixes.
A written transcript of this conversation is available on persuasion.community
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