to affect what we do from here on out.
to affect what we do from here on out.
Philip Esformes and Arnaldo Carmouze falsified and altered Medical Records that support services supposedly rendered at Hospital 1, Esformes’ network and other health care providers involved in the fraud. Arnaldo Carmouze also signed, fabricate and altered prescriptions, medical records, including home health referrals, admission at Hospital 1, discharge paperwork, and office visit notes (See Figure 2). He also prescribed unnecessary drugs including narcotics to Esformes’ network beneficiaries. They submitted false claims to Medicare and Medicaid in the amount of $1…
A good education may be one of the most important things to which an individual can aspire. Even so, thoughts, ideas, and theories on education are not always agreed upon, even by experts in the educational field. Two such educators are Paulo Friere and William Brickman. This paper will look at the contributions of both men, their similarities and differences, as well as difficulties both encountered in their respective journeys.…
It was the late 1600’s and people of strong religion in Salem, Massachusetts were becoming oddly stricken by recent events regarding the practice of witchcraft. Through this period of time twenty people were executed due to mere assumption to have been involved in witchcraft or Devil worship. Living through these events and making accounts of them were two men by the names, Cotton Mather and John Hale. Both Cotton Mather and John Hale, influential Puritan Ministers, were supporters of the Salem Witch Trials which took place for two years between 1692 and 1693 and, had both written two very influential pieces detailing them, Mather's "Wonders of the Invisible World" and, Hale's "A Modest Inquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft". Through similar and contrasting rhetorical style and device the two proved their separate messages of the trials, Mather's being that the…
Nicholas Carr, based on his essay, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” would disagree with Steven Pinker’s “Mind Over Mass Media.” Pinker believes that technology is the only thing that keeps us smart in a society level by making it easier to be informed about everything, while Carr believes that it affects our critical thinking ability because having access to so much information makes us skim through the reading, so even though we are reading many things, it does not mean we are actually holding on to the information.…
While one may look at Richard Connell's "The Most Dangerous Game" and Ernest Hemmingway's "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" and pass them off as basically the same, he should be reminded of the cliché "don't judge a book by its cover." Although both are short stories, each work encompasses a number of elements that are characteristically associated with either commercial or literary fiction. By evaluating the author's use of elements of fiction, such as plot, theme, and characterization, and the literary devices diction, figurative language, and detail, one can come to the conclusion that neither story is better than the other.…
Nicholas Carr in The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to our Brains (2010) asserts that the internet is the single most powerful mind-altering technology. Carr supports this assertion by giving various, significant examples of how people think with the internet today compared to how they thought back then. The writer concludes in order for people to improve skills, they will have to cope with the new technology and the way they think.…
Nicholas Carr, a writer for New York Times, and Wired, wrote a piece labeled “is Google making us stupid?”. Within the text Nicholas Carr shows us how the use of technology and the internet are changing the way our brains process information.…
In Nicholas Carr’s book, “The Shallows: What The Internet is Doing to our Brains,” he makes the powerful point that in order to assume technology’s power, especially intellectual technology, we must pay a particularly high price. Carr states this idea in one quote from his book, “The price we pay to assume technologies power is alienation. The toll can be particularly high with our intellectual technologies. the tools of the mind amplify and in turn numb the most intimate, the most human, of our natural capacities- those for reason perception, memory, emotion(pg 211).” This price for intellectual technologies can range from a lowered ability to pull up memorized information, a shorter attention span, having a harder time learning new information, or even a changed perception of our world. All of these points help show how the internet is affecting our brains physically and mentally.…
In Steven Johnson’s, “Watching TV Makes You Smarter,” and Nicholas Carr’s, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” both authors highlight the ways media have changed the way we learn in the world today; Johnson argues that television is having a positive effect on society and, in fact, is making us smarter, while Carr contends that media, especially the internet, limits our ability for, “deep thought.”…
"Is Google Making Us Stupid?" by Nicholas Carr illustrates to me that the internet is slowing down the development of our brain. I agree with his argument that technology has affected out attention span, he sets an example of how we now cannot concentrate on the readings, Scott Karp, and Bruce Friedman, both agree that their ability to read long articles has been affected by the web. Also, I agree with Carr that we are becoming low thinking people because the internet gives us easy access to have quick information research. However, I think that Google and the internet are actually helping us to learn new information. It is because when the computers are not here, we do all things by hand. If you want to know what a word means, you would need to get a dictionary. If you want to look up something that your teacher mentioned in class, but you don't know what it is, or how does it look like. Then, you would have to find the encyclopedia to look for it. In nowadays, we do everything by computer, communicate with people, blogging, searching, watch videos, etc. We can learn new information quickly by searching from the internet. As Carr said, "It [the Net] injects the medium’s content with hyperlinks, blinking ads, and other digital gewgaws, and it surrounds the content with the content of all the other media it has absorbed. A new e-mail message, for instance, may announce its arrival as we’re glancing over the latest headlines at a newspaper’s site" (Carr 62). They take away our concentration, when we are reading an article there are lots of ads, hyperlinks, which would take our attentions. Thus, we will go to another website and look for other stuffs.…
The internet has become the number one source for information. It is quick and easy. Some argue that it is a distraction, while others argue that it is the best thing since slice bread. In the article “Is Google Making us Stupid?” by Carr he used a form of ethos and factual evidence to help get his point across to his readers. He argues how technology is hindering people and causing them to become lazy, therefore causing harm towards today’s society. Throughout the article “Mind Over Mass Media” Steven Pinker, also uses a form of ethos and factual evidence to help voice his opinion on how technology is serving more of a benefit. Some believe that people are becoming more intelligent because of the use of…
According to the course description at Schenectady Community College “ College Composition is a course that provides a foundation in academic discourse by developing effective communication skills with an emphasis on expository writing.” The course is offered to students’ in the Technology, Criminal Justice, Early Childhood, Hospitality, and Culinary program. RCCC plans on eliminating the ENG 123 course as a requirement. As a student taking this course I find it to be very helpful, therefore, it should be required for all students to take.…
Two children living in different times and have different color of skin share the same struggle. Even though they are so far apart both Wright and Walls suffer as equally as the other. Both protagonists have to do things that they do not want to just too barely make it, and they have to overcome obstacles to achieve their dreams that ended up far greater than what they had expected. Both Wright and Walls use specific character traits to overcome their obstacles such as the traits of being independent, and having perseverance, and courage, and these character traits helped them throughout their life time, and greatly impacted them as they got older.…
Ever since the advent of the modern digital culture, there have been some heated discussions on the topic of whether technology is a foe or a friend. Some people argue that it is influencing us negatively, scattering our attention and diffusing our concentration, while others believe otherwise, suggesting that it is making our lives more efficient and convenient. The emergence of such technology not only enhances some of our fundamental cognitive abilities, but also enables us to explore more of what is we are truly interested in.…
Nicholas Carr makes his point, Google is making us dumb, very clear. Carr noticed it himself. He realizes that his mind works differently when it comes to reading. Carr can’t focus on lengthy articles. After two or three lines his mind drifts away from the article and his mind tries to find something else to do. He says that this all happened from looking for information on the internet for over a decade, reading emails, scanning headlines, reading blog posts, watching videos, listening to podcasts, and tripping from link to link. Carr makes his claim even more true by doing his research. He interviews different people who notice the change in their behavior when it comes to reading or research. Carr asks people who career is based off reading. For example, he uses Scott Karp. Karp was a literature major in college he admits that he completely stopped reading books because he got all his information from the internet. He also talks to Bruce Friedman. Friedman says he lost the ability to absorb longish articles. Even in 1882, Friedrich Nietzsche got a typewriter and noticed how his writing style was different. He would change words to make it shorter. Carr is waiting for neurological and physical experiments that explain the effects of internet use have on the brain. Carr noticed people skim through articles instead of actually reading them. He also learned that people actually do read a lot thanks to text messages. Carr also noticed…