Sailer in TAKI'S MAGAZINE: "The Replication Crisis and the Repetition Crisis"
02/17/2016
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From my new column in Taki’s Magazine:

The Replication Crisis and the Repetition Crisis

by Steve Sailer

February 17, 2016

With data becoming ever more abundant, this should be the golden age of the social sciences. And yet they seem to be suffering two mirror-image nervous breakdowns—the Replication Crisis and the Repetition Crisis.

… One cause of the Replication Crisis has been that analysts grant themselves excessive post hoc liberties to crunch the numbers however many ways it takes to find something—anything—that is “statistically significant” (which isn’t the same as actually significant) and thus qualifies as a paper for publish-or-perish purposes. Hence, social scientists seem to be coming up with a surplus of implausible junk science findings on trivial topics, such as “priming” (the contemporary version of subliminal advertising), which then routinely fail to replicate.

In contrast, in what I’ll dub the Repetition Crisis (a.k.a. the Explanation Crisis), academics hamstring the interest and usefulness of their findings by ruling out ahead of time any explanatory factors other than the same tiny number of politically correct concepts that were exhausted decades ago.

The social sciences in 2016: Too little replication of exciting new findings, too much repetition of tired old rationalizations.

Read the whole thing there.

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