People like complicated shit. They perceive it as more valuable than simple shit. Complicated means that complexity can substitute for the hard work that simple shit demands. Complicated exercise science shit became available over the past 30 years with the advent of several new journals developed as publication avenues for exercise "science" departments that grew out of PE departments. In theory, this should have helped, but most of the programs that graduate Exercise Physiology majors lack the academic rigor necessary to generate graduate students of the caliber necessary to support useful research. And useful research must always be directed by experience with the material so that the question being investigated actually makes sense. The proliferation of programs like this guarantees a dearth of experienced people, i.e. people who actually train in the discipline they are investigating, to lead the programs. In our field, there are very few ExPhys department heads that do productive barbell training. This lack of experienced leadership generates the mess we have now in place of useful science, which we have discussed on this board for years. People who worship peer-reviewed journal-published papers as the gold-standard of knowledge in a field are now calling their clinical practice "evidence-based." Sad, because if the literature is shit, your practice will be shit. But it WILL be "scientific."
Practical Programming for Strength Training was written specifically to address this issue. But the silliness persists: http://startingstrength.com/resource...ad.php?t=35591