“Dave, stop. Stop, will you? Stop, Dave. Will you stop, Dave?” This essay, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr, starts by quoting, and then talks about a scene from a popular science fiction movie, which is not only a good hook, but also leads straight into his topic about the issues of technology, though he quickly turns to jargon and larger words, making it harder to read the essay, which is irony as the topic is about how it's becoming harder to read in bigger chunks. He explains that because of the style of the internet and technology; we have become accustomed to quickly browsing, never-ending distractions, and an urge for immediate answers.…
In the article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr. He talks about the influence the Internet has on people. How easy it is with the click of a button and you can get thousands of results. This is the power of Google. It’s having effects on the brain but not quite like you would want it to.…
turned into the guy on the Jet Ski, just skimming the surface for the answer. Not going the extra…
In his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr explains his point of view of how the brain is being reprogramed due to technology. He states that the Internet changes how we receive and process information and that surfing the web takes almost no concentration and that is why we lose focus easily. Carr gives his experiences as an example in how he is no longer able to keep concentration to even complete reading an article. His main point is that search engines, like Google, and the internet in general is damaging our ability to think, and that we were probably better in the past when reading was done…
Based on the essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid” written by Nicholas Carr, my opinion is that I agree with Carr’s thesis that the internet is interrupting human life. My opinion is that the internet is causing more problems than solving them. For example, I understand that the internet has websites like Wikipedia and other online sources that can help someone write a report on a war or side with a certain group about something. But, sometimes these articles on these websites can be changed by anyone who wants to. These articles sometimes have no facts that jump out to the reader.…
Style is the one distinctive factor that separates an individual from the proverbial herd. The fascinating aspect of literature is how it differs based on the style of the individual. In the essay “Is Google making us Stupid” the persuasive style of Nicholas Carr’s writing allows us to see his unique perspective. The use of his textual evidence, emotion, and incorporation of literary devices distinguish his unique style and provide a legitimate convincing argument.…
In the essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr. Carr speaks on how over the last decade his focus and ability to concentrate has been declining due to the fact that he has a plethora of knowledge available to him on his smartphone or computer, thus he is not able to focus on a task at hand for as long as he could before the age of information. Carr claims that his mind is changing for the worse and backs his evidence with first hand accounts of respected scholars who also share the same fate as he does. “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” is an article that delves deep into the age of information and can explain why it is much easier for people to procrastinate today than it was a decade ago.…
Today, many people find themselves using the Internet for almost everything. In fact, our society would probably have a very difficult time without access to the Web. It is an easy and convenient way to find what we are looking for, but has humanity become dependent on it? Has it turned our brains into mesh? Some say the modern generation is lazy, and the Internet is to blame for this. Contrary to that argument, access to technology has tremendously improved our world in many ways. The real concern arises from Nicholas Carr’s, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Carr grabs the attention of most, if not all, the viewers of this title, as he uncovers his highly critical article of the Internet’s effect on cognition.…
In his article: Is Google Making Us Stupid, the author Nicholas Carr describes how Internet searching influences he and his friends. He states that he became to lose “concentration” on books and long-articles. Therefore, he raises a view that we need to care about the Web information, although it makes human life more convenient. He wrote: “The Web [had] been a godsend to me as a writer. Research that once required days in the stacks or periodical rooms of libraries can now be done in minutes” (Para.3). Obviously, the Internet searching technologies, for instance, Google, it really helps us save times. The Internet searching technology makes human life more convenient and make office works and school paper works more efficient.…
As the value of deep reading increased along with the creation of books did we loose a part of our primative selfs? Human brains are not hardwired to be able to think undistracted or to be completely immersied in one thing that you cannot be aware of your surroundings. In “Is Google Making Us Stupid” and “The Deepening Page” by Nicholas Carr the author explains the rise in value of undistracted reading and the how technology took away that skill but brought us closer to our primal way of thinking.…
Sometimes, many people have been saying that because the internet is our issues and it make us stupid, people need to avoid using the internet. They say that using the Internet is negative with several reasons. Nicholas Carr is the one of them, who see the Internet as negative, and he authored a magazine article entitled "Is Google Making Us Stupid? What the Internet is doing to our brains" (alternatively "Is Google Making Us Stupid?"). Carr explains that the negative impact of the Internet on humans based on his experience and the opinions of other scholars. His main argument is that the Internet has changed the way people read and think, and the use of the Internet harms reading and thinking skills. His argument is, however, based on his…
As Carr is point out in the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Carr said “My mind would get caught up in the narrative or the turns of the argument, and I’d spend hours strolling through long stretches of prose. That’s rarely the case anymore. Now my concentration often starts to drift after two or three pages.” This quotation implies that long time internet users tend to loss concentration, and felt difficult to stay focus. Carr also talks about how his friends are facing similar experiences, the more they use internet, the harder it becomes to stay…
The piece, “Is Google Making us Stupid?”, by Nicholas Carr provides an interesting view from a writer's perspective of his change in processing information due to the growing digital world. He reflects on how the internet has made his life easier but also caused his attention span to shorten. He believes that while the internet is very helpful, it is changing the way people think. Carr relates his struggles to those of many of his intellectual colleagues and how it has changed their lives as fellow consumers of text. He explores the changes within the mind and the way that, in turn, it has changed a person's response to reading. To further his explanations, he uses in depth descriptions of various technologies and their…
Attention span is the ability to stay focused on one item for a period of time without getting distracted. With Google available at the click of a button the World Wide Web of information is available at someone’s fingertips to look up anything they want. With all of this information, paying attention to one certain topic or sentence becomes very difficult. Nicholas Carr of the newspaper The Atlantic explains “I feel if I’m always dragging my wayward brain back to the text. The deep reading that used to come naturally has become a struggle”(2). Carr use to be able to pay attention to readings for long periods of time but now is struggling to read long complicated texts. This is due to the excess amount of information available when using Google. There is so much information, instead of trying to steadily absorb what he is reading Carr now just skims through the text. Decreasing the attention spent on one-item decreases capacity for understanding complex information. Because maintaining attention on a certain topic helps to understand that topic, when Google decreases human’s attention span this results in a decrease of…
The article called Does the Internet Make You Dumber by Nicholas Carr states that, “The Internet grants us easy access to unprecedented amounts of information. Growing body of scientific evidence suggest that the Net, with its constant distractions and interruptions, is also turning us into scattered and superficial thinkers” (1). Carr states in his article that the Internet affects people in a negative way, messing with their attention and memory. Carr also states how focused you are affects your personality, your memory, and your thoughts. One of the studies Carr looked at was conducted by a neuroscientist named Michael Merzenich. He said, “He was profoundly worried about the cognitive consequences of the constant distraction and interruptions the Internet bombards us with” (2).…