For over a decade now, the World has relied upon the global Internet as a tool and means of survival. From looking up your favorite recipe on Google to checking your beloved sports teams score on ESPN, the Internet has served as a lifesaver to our existence. However Nicholas Carr, author of the short essay “Is Google Making us Stupid?” states that while the Internet may be a “lifesaver” it also has its downfalls. Carr uses personal stories and tells of his extensive research in the area to make his readers believe in his credibility. This appeals to ethos, combined with his friendly tone, create an effective argument for why the Internet might actually be making humans stupid.…
In “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr argues that the Internet is changing the way that we think and that it diffuses our focus and our ability to comprehend information. Throughout his article, he makes use of Ethos, Pathos, and Logos to persuade the reader to his point of view on the Internet in a negative way.…
Carr has first hand experience with what the Internet is doing to the minds of those who use it on a daily basis. He used to be able to completely immerse himself into a long book, and spend hours pondering the words and arguments. However, since the “Net is becoming a universal medium, the conduit for most of the information that flows through my eyes and ears and into my mind”(p.90) he finds that he can no longer concentrate and contemplate on longer pieces of…
In his essay, Is Google Making Us Stupid? , Nicholas Carr argues, that although the Internet has allowed us a vast vortex of knowledge, that it is not only changing the way that we consume information, but fundamentally rewiring our brains to change the way we think. Carr argues, that the pervasive use of search engines such as Google hampers our ability for the deep and concentrating reading central pertinent to critical thought. Our over reliance on such technologies, Carr claims, has taken over where our minds use to be. People no longer in deep critical thinking and reading like they use to, but instead our dependency on the web has made so that short, easy to digest information - easy content, no substance.…
Bibliography: Jeffrey Rosen. (July 25, 2010). The Web Means the End of Forgetting. Available: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/25/magazine/25privacy-t2.html?_r=2&ref=technology. Last accessed 25th Oct 2012.…
The community they have developed, he believes, promotes activities that tear down not only our country, but human society. 3. To support his thesis, Gutfield points out that internet consumers become distracted from the importance of everyday life by unrelated – and at times severely demeaning and dividing – content they find online. He laments that “we’re really just numb nuts united by a thirst for anything that might divert attention from the stuff we should be thinking about” (203). For…
With the increased use of the Internet in people’s lives, a person cannot help but to feel a shift in the way he or she processes information so that the passages he or she reads are given cursory attention for the sake of efficiency. There are many consequences to this type of thinking. For instance, as Nicholas Carr, the writer of “Is Google Making Us Stupid?,” states, readers are more likely to put speed and practicality above forming connections within the text, which “may be weakening [their] capacity for the kind of deep reading that emerged when an earlier technology, the printing press, made long and complex works of prose commonplace” (Carr 229). As unlikely as it seems, the way people read affects how they think. In the case of the Internet, the increase in information has shaped people to become shallow thinkers.…
“is a great chance to understand a distinctive opinion about the Internet world. I agree with Carr’s view points after I finish my reading. His point “People who read text studded with links, the studies show, comprehend less than those who read traditional linear text.”(Nicholas Carr, June 5 2010, Wall Street Journal) showed stringency after Carr gave some support, and I am agree him. For instance, when people are reading online, they can’t always help check and play in their Facebook. In addition, Carr also gave few of experiment to proof his view point, and I think those experiment let me to conviction. Furthermore, the other point that I agree with Carr, is “The Web never encourages us to slow down. It keeps us in a state of perpetual mental locomotion.” (Nicholas Carr, June 5 2010, Wall Street Journal)The Internet just keep distracting us, if we can turn off our computer, we can do anything in attention. For example , once when I turned off my computer, I couldn’t believe I couldn’t finish my homework in 3 hour, and it gave me just 2 hours to finish my math…
Nicholas Carr begins his essay, “Is Google Making Us Stupid? What the Internet is doing to our brains” he references Stanley Kubrick’s film 2001: A Space Odyssey, particularly the part where a character is dismantling the brain of and artificial intelligence machine. Carr goes so far as to say that he can relate to the aforementioned machine because he feels his brain has also been tampered with. He quickly loses interest in the activities he used to enjoy, such as reading, because he spends so much time on the Internet and believes it is affecting his concentration abilities. He is fair in that he admits that the Internet has been useful in connecting with people and finding information but he also believes that, like a double-edged sword, the benefit comes with a price. Carr believes that media through the Internet can provide the information you need but also shapes the course of a person’s thought process. He believes our minds will begin to need to take data in the same way that the Internet does, “In a swiftly moving stream of particles.” Nicholas Carr is not the only one with this opinion; Scott Karp is an online blogger who claims he has completely stopped reading books even though he graduated college as a literature major. Karp believes that, since he started using the Internet, the way he thinks has changed but not the way he reads. A study recently conducted by the University College London backs this theory up. The five year study shows that most online users only skim dialogue, sporadically save long articles to read later, and tend to, “power browse”, a term that means people will look for keywords that pertain to their research to avoid reading more than they have to. Maryanne Wolf, a developmental psychologist and author, says that, “We are not only what we read; we are how we read.” Wolf is of the opinion that the way people read on the Internet puts efficiency and immediacy above all else and may dwindle the…
In the article of “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, Nicholas Carr argues that the Internet is changing the way our mind works and has some negative effects on our lives. He views the idea that the Internet is an obstacle for individuals to think deeply, and it is rebuilding our mind and memory. As Carr said, nowadays, it is so difficult for him to focus on a long paper; instead, he always spends a lot of time on the Internet. In the past, the writers like him should stay in the library to study for several days, but now, because of the Internet, it just takes them a couple of minutes. As Marshall McLuhan, a media theorist argued that although media provided us with a huge number of information and thoughts, it also rebuilt our process of thought. A study of online research habits, done by scholars from University College London, shows that our ways of reading and thinking have a large change. From the study, it is obvious that users are using a new way to read instead of traditional sense: they often do a quick…
In the last hundred years technology has advance greatly. We didn’t have computers or smart phones, but in the last 30 years a technology has advanced faster than before thanks to the invention of the internet. Thirty years ago the internet only contained six links today the internet contains all of the worlds information, information that can be accessed in mere seconds. The internet has changed the world and has changed humanity. Anything you want to learn you can find instantly and as amazing as it sounds, Nicholas Carr a journalist and writer with an interest in technology, business and knowledge wrote an article for the Atlantic monthly in 2008 titled “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” in where he argues that the Internet is reprogramming the…
In Nicholas Carr’s journal article titled “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” published July/August 2008 in The Atlantic magazine, Carr discusses the changes that have been coming up since people start to rely on the internet to get information. He makes an argument many people might not ever consider. Carr claims that the internet has actually affected how humans beings process information. His main thesis is that people has become impatient and unfocused.…
Toppo, Greg. "Making students literate in digital age." USA Today 25 July 2011: 02A. Gale Opposing Viewpoints In Context. Web. 23 Apr. 2012.…
Blogging has emerged as one of the most popular forms of online discourse. The ease and lack of expense in setting blogs has raised intriguing possibilities for language learning in social media. The unique nature of its architecture and its low cost have not only affected how different bloggers can publish and distribute their work to a wider audience but also how they see themselves as writers. According to Blood (2002), blogs have been used in various ways: as online journals, a means of designing hypertexts, and more radically, to create what calls the first native form of discourse on the internet. She argues that blogging best reflects the dream of Tim Berners-Lee (2000), who was one of the principal designers of the World Wide Web, to make the Web into something truly interactive both in terms of how texts are read and how they can be easily posted and accessed. The growing interest in blogging has aroused the interest of English as a Second Language and English as a Foreign Language fashion bloggers who see blogging as a simple and low cost way of giving readers an access to publishing, advertising and distributing their writings on the internet as a method of providing them with the experience of writing in a digital format, and as a means of discussing issues related to their social and personal lives. According to Fleishman (2002), blogging is the art of turning one 's own filter on news and the world into something others might want to read, link to, and write about. The openness can give the bloggers a greater sense of the variety of possible audiences they can reach, both for understanding these audiences and learning strategies to respond to them. These types of on-line discussions have been referred to as "gated communities" (Lowe & Williams, 2004).…
The Internet allows exchanges of information between individuals and between individuals and groups. It is generating the second citizens’ revolution. It has been long since Internet newspapers and portals started exerting enormous influence. It was the print media that wiped out the absolute monarchies and opened a new civil society in the West. If modern newspapers played a leading role in raising the awareness of human rights and promoting equality, the Internet media of the 21st century has changed the world completely.…