When it comes to proposed solutions to life's problems, whether on an individual\xa0or societal\xa0scale, the four most commonly used words these days are "According to a study . . . " This phrase is used by journalists and media outlets; we certainly use it a lot in AoM articles. And it's used in the rationales that are forwarded for implementing some new program in a school or other\xa0institution.\xa0\n\nMy guest, however, questions whether we really should be lending the research of social psychologists and behavioral scientists\xa0so much weight.\xa0\n\nHis name is Jesse Singal and he's the author of The Quick Fix: Why Fad Psychology\xa0Can't Cure Our Social Ills. Today on the show, Jesse explains how\xa0social psychology has come to such prominence in our culture, the role things like TED talks have played in its rise, and yet how the replication crisis calls into question the legitimacy of the field's growing influence. We discuss why the solutions sometimes offered by behavioral science are both seductive and flawed, and how this dynamic played out in the self-esteem movement of the 1990s. We then discuss if another fad of social science, power posing, actually works, before turning to how the problems of positive\xa0psychology\xa0are exemplified\xa0in a program the military adopted to help soldiers with PTSD. We end our conversation with whether the idea of grit is all it's cracked up to be, and how ultimately, there are no quick fixes to life's big problems.\xa0\n\nGet the show notes at aom.is/quickfix.