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What if most of what you learned about human behavior was built on a foundation that hasn't been properly tested? In 2015, a landmark project revealed that when 270 researchers attempted to replicate 100 of psychology's most celebrated studies, only 36% produced the same results. That isn't a minor footnote — it is a fundamental challenge to how we understand the science of the human mind.
In this episode of Second Thoughts, host Roger Hall — psychologist, behavioral expert, and author — sits down to unpack one of the most uncomfortable questions in modern science: how much of what we call psychological truth is actually just well-funded assumption?
Roger brings decades of clinical and research experience to a conversation that is equal parts eye-opening, practical, and surprisingly funny. From the hidden financial incentives driving academic fraud, to why ancient dietary traditions were solving public health problems centuries before double-blind studies existed, this episode will permanently change the way you read a headline, evaluate a study, and think about the wisdom passed down through generations.
💡 What You Can Learn from This Episode:
🔹Why 64% of landmark psychology studies failed to replicate
🔹How traditions like kosher dietary laws were doing public health science long before labs existed
🔹The real reason researchers commit fraud — and why most of them aren't even bad people
🔹What ego depletion is, why it makes sense, and why the study testing it was fundamentally flawed
🔹The difference between a statistically significant result and one that actually matters in your life
🔹Why "blind" peer review isn't really blind — and how academic politics kill honest research
🔹How universities shifted from educating students to chasing million-dollar grants
🔹The padlock theory: why accountability only works on certain kinds of people
🔹Why discounting your grandmother's wisdom might be one of the biggest intellectual mistakes you can make
NOTABLE MOMENT:
"Did grandma run a double blind placebo controlled study? No. But we shouldn't discount the wisdom gained through centuries because we don't understand the explanation today." — Roger Hall
Send us Fan Mail
Support the show
Thank you for tuning in to this episode of Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall!
If you enjoyed today's insights, don't forget to subscribe for more content on leadership, productivity, and personal growth. Share this episode with friends, colleagues, or anyone who could benefit from these powerful strategies.
🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!
Follow me on socials:
X - @DoctorRogerHall
Facebook - @Roger Hall
Instagram - @DoctorRogerHall
Linkedin - @Dr Roger Hall
Youtube - @DoctorRogerHall
Rumble - @SecondThoughts
By Roger HallWhat if most of what you learned about human behavior was built on a foundation that hasn't been properly tested? In 2015, a landmark project revealed that when 270 researchers attempted to replicate 100 of psychology's most celebrated studies, only 36% produced the same results. That isn't a minor footnote — it is a fundamental challenge to how we understand the science of the human mind.
In this episode of Second Thoughts, host Roger Hall — psychologist, behavioral expert, and author — sits down to unpack one of the most uncomfortable questions in modern science: how much of what we call psychological truth is actually just well-funded assumption?
Roger brings decades of clinical and research experience to a conversation that is equal parts eye-opening, practical, and surprisingly funny. From the hidden financial incentives driving academic fraud, to why ancient dietary traditions were solving public health problems centuries before double-blind studies existed, this episode will permanently change the way you read a headline, evaluate a study, and think about the wisdom passed down through generations.
💡 What You Can Learn from This Episode:
🔹Why 64% of landmark psychology studies failed to replicate
🔹How traditions like kosher dietary laws were doing public health science long before labs existed
🔹The real reason researchers commit fraud — and why most of them aren't even bad people
🔹What ego depletion is, why it makes sense, and why the study testing it was fundamentally flawed
🔹The difference between a statistically significant result and one that actually matters in your life
🔹Why "blind" peer review isn't really blind — and how academic politics kill honest research
🔹How universities shifted from educating students to chasing million-dollar grants
🔹The padlock theory: why accountability only works on certain kinds of people
🔹Why discounting your grandmother's wisdom might be one of the biggest intellectual mistakes you can make
NOTABLE MOMENT:
"Did grandma run a double blind placebo controlled study? No. But we shouldn't discount the wisdom gained through centuries because we don't understand the explanation today." — Roger Hall
Send us Fan Mail
Support the show
Thank you for tuning in to this episode of Second Thoughts with Dr. Roger Hall!
If you enjoyed today's insights, don't forget to subscribe for more content on leadership, productivity, and personal growth. Share this episode with friends, colleagues, or anyone who could benefit from these powerful strategies.
🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms.
🌐 Connect with Dr. Hall: Visit drrogerhall.com for resources and more.
📧 Have a question? Submit it for a chance to be featured in a future episode!
Follow me on socials:
X - @DoctorRogerHall
Facebook - @Roger Hall
Instagram - @DoctorRogerHall
Linkedin - @Dr Roger Hall
Youtube - @DoctorRogerHall
Rumble - @SecondThoughts