Nicholas Carr is an author who primarily writes about technology, economics, and culture. Carr’s 2008 piece, “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” ironically published in The Atlantic, a magazine that highlights the activity of technology, the internet, and the ever changing cultural trends. As the title of the essay suggests, Carr constantly reiterates how and why the Internet is creating problems for today’s society. He makes references to Google and also discusses other technological advancements throughout history. The ability to access large amounts of data with a simple click of the mouse has become the demise of an Internet reliant society, ultimately transforming the masses into instant gratification, information seeking…
In Is Google Making Us Stupid?, Nicholas Carr argues that people are more interested in instant gratification when they take in information than they are in critically thinking about it. He states that people adapt very quickly to new technologies and incorporate aspects of said technologies into their perception of the world, so inventions such as the computer, which are developed for the purpose of fast rapid information transfer, influence the rate at which people evaluate information. It is more common to see people unable to concentrate on activities such as reading today than it was ten years ago. People are more used to scrolling through web pages and skimming articles than assessing the information they come across. Although this method of accessing information allows people to research more efficiently, people are also more likely to acquiesce to whatever mindset…
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…
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.…
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.…
Many people argue that internet is making us smarter, due to the fact that it has given us an easier access to look for information on any topics within seconds, however the internet is filled with unreliable sources and information. Especially on certain websites, like Wikipedia which allows everyone to edit it, which might cause false information to spread around. Another aspect is that internet has made instantaneous communication worldwide a common thing, allowing intercultural experience that was once impossible to succeed. However, social media has created huge distraction to teenagers who often browse through their Facebook, twitter accounts in class and elsewhere. As a matter of fact, internet is making us less attentive and intelligent, as people’s ability to read and write aggravate, moreover, we are constantly distracted by the tremendous amounts of information on the internet, which leads to loss of concentration and memory.…
Google is making us smarter as we re-discover new ways to learn. In "Is Google Making Us Supid?” Nicholas Carr argues his profound concern on the use of the Internet and how it is affecting our brains. Carr 's main argument is that the Internet may well have damaging effects on cognition while reading; that would diminish the ability for concentration and contemplation. Carr strongly believes that the problem with the Internet is how it pushes us towards browsing information rather than digging in more deeply and considering it.…
The article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” is written by Carr Nicholas who wants to convey a message that media or other technologies could not take place of the way we circuit our own thoughts. He first uses examples from Stanley Kubrick’s 2007: A Space Odyssey to show that his mind is different from before. His way of thinking and the way of reading have changed because nowadays online “instant availability”. He then used many people’s experience on the Google convenience and they meet the same situation like Carr. They changed the way they think so reading becomes a struggle for them. Then Carr wants to systemize it as an option which technology benefits us. Though this could help us improve the…
In his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid”, published in the July edition of The Atlantic Monthly, Nicholas Carr argues that the constant use of internet and its advancement is harmful to the human brain. Nicholas Carr is an American writer who has written many essays and writings on culture and technology. Carr starts off “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by introducing a film scene from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey that shows artificial intelligence begging Dave to stop disconnecting memory circuits. Then Carr transitions into his own words stating that he can feel it too. He can feel the effects of internet. His brain cannot function the same way it used to. His neural circuitry has been remapping. He can’t perform easy taskings such as reading long literary works (Carr 2). His concentrations are always drifting. Then, he shows that he is not the only one feeling the effects, there are others that also feel the same effects. The author dives in more into the article with more evidence and presenting similar cases. He especially discusses that our neural paths are changing due to the use of internet and presents evidence for it. Towards the end, he acknowledges that he just may be a…
In the movie, “2001: A Space Odyssey,” Stanley Kubrick writes, “As we come to rely on computers to mediate our understanding of the world, it is our own intelligence that flattens into artificial intelligence.” In the essay “IS Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr, M.A. a writer and blogger, talks about the Internet and specifically search engine Google as an example. He points out that beside the fact these technological advancements making life much as easy through easy access of information. However, the Internet does not have all the information even though most of it is found there. In addition people should not base the truth that is used in most of the situations on such sources. The Internet has led to people ignoring the pre-existing information along that would be found manually just because it can be found on the Internet.…
The article “is google making us stupid?” by Nicholas carr discusses how the internet affects people is ability to process information. He begins by pointing out that when people are using google, they do not try to understand deep meaning. Nicholas carr further argues that google can attract people attention, for example, using computer and cellphone all the times. Later in the article, Nicholas carr discusses that people’s concentration really decreasing due to the Internet. By the end of the article, Nicholas cart discusses the idea that how the internet is set up to make other people money. In Nicholas cart experience stated that without technology people cannot think critically. The most significant idea in this article is “so even as google is giving us all that useful information, it’s also encouraging us to think superficially. it’s making us shallow. “This idea is significant because in the modern life we are use technology find information, but we just see the surface we don’t think deep of that meaning.…
Technology can change the way humans live in daily lives, the way we learn and the way we use our faculties of attention. In the articles, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?: What the Internet is doing to our brains” and “Is Google wrecking our memory?” Nicholas Carr and Clive Thompson discusses that humans being are taking over by the use of technology and is affected major parts of our social lives. Carr argues that internet is just a set for people to make money, and how our critical thinking skills and attention span is degrading. While Thompson argues that using technology is an advantage for people to learn more in different ways such as storing information. According to the reading, both authors agree that technology is popular in individuals…
In “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” Nicholas Carr discusses over the question about the cause and effect of how Internet impacts our thinking, reading, writing habits, and how our brains react to adapt to the “new-media rule”. The author uses many specific examples and statistics to demonstrate his point of view.…
Professor Sherry Turkle teaches Social Studies of Science at MIT and is a licensed clinical psychologist. In Alone Together she compares the Internet to a ball and chain that keeps us tethered to the screens of our computers and cellphones. She summarizes her view in the statement “We expect more from technology and…
In today’s modern world, technology has a great influence on our life and time. Back in the early 19th century, when electronic devices had not been invented, the population could only use printed word such as books, posters, newspapers or magazines, to gather information. Later, in the mid 20th century, the use of computers, televisions and radios helped people to know about the incidents happening all around the world, more easily. Now, in the 21st century, the creation of internet and other devices to access it has helped us to attain gigabytes of information, just with the click of our mouse. The internet has made it possible for us to acquire answers for almost all of the questions that we ask, and has alleviated the access to information to almost every topic imaginable.…