Most personal development is notoriously unreliable.
Mark Manson, a popular personal development author, is making an effort to make his advice more scientific. To this end, he has started labelling his blog posts based on their evidence base. He writes that he has: “put together a team of Psychologists with MSc’s and PhD’s to help me research, outline and fact-check the content here on the site”. He divides his blog posts into four categories:
Evidence-based: for posts that recommend actions based on academic research, where it has been checked that studies have replicated and have decent sample sizes, ect.
Fact-checked: for posts that have been fact checked and are descriptive (he only uses evidence-based to describe posts that recommend actions)
Theory: Rooted in academic theories that might be highly theoretical or not yet confirmed
Opinion: Articles based purely off his own personal opinion
Anyway, just thought that I’d mention this here, because it’s great to see an example of a popular author shifting more this direction and adopting their own (less nerdy) version of epistemic statuses.
Mark Manson and Evidence-Based Personal Development
Most personal development is notoriously unreliable.
Mark Manson, a popular personal development author, is making an effort to make his advice more scientific. To this end, he has started labelling his blog posts based on their evidence base. He writes that he has: “put together a team of Psychologists with MSc’s and PhD’s to help me research, outline and fact-check the content here on the site”. He divides his blog posts into four categories:
Evidence-based: for posts that recommend actions based on academic research, where it has been checked that studies have replicated and have decent sample sizes, ect.
Fact-checked: for posts that have been fact checked and are descriptive (he only uses evidence-based to describe posts that recommend actions)
Theory: Rooted in academic theories that might be highly theoretical or not yet confirmed
Opinion: Articles based purely off his own personal opinion
Anyway, just thought that I’d mention this here, because it’s great to see an example of a popular author shifting more this direction and adopting their own (less nerdy) version of epistemic statuses.