Literature Review Technology as a tool plays a significant role in people's lives and provides users with convenient services. For instance, the Internet supports people to search information immediately, vehicles sustain people to go everywhere, and computers improve people’s ability to record, analyze, and calculate information. Using technology helps people save a large amount of time during the process of activities. However, people are too close to technology, which means people are dependent on technology. A few people who use technology losing control harm themselves. Therefore, what is the worst effect of using technology? The worst effect is technology dependence, which is shown by addiction, distraction, and thinking lightly. In the article "Does the Internet Make You Dumber?", Carr (2010) shows the drawbacks of the Internet. He states that people depend on the Internet. A long-term influence of the Internet can change continually the structure of the human brain. Carr explains that the Internet distracts or interrupts people‘s attention and may lead them to think shallowly. His purpose is to warn people to control themselves when using technology. Carr uses credible sources and powerful experiments to make his argument strong. For example, Carr proves that the …show more content…
Pinker refutes the negative effects of new technology, such as changing the users’ brain, distraction, and thinking lightly. He declares that experiences just influence the brain in specific parts, rather than change the basic information-processing capacities of the brain. Then, Pinker believes that distraction and thinking lightly are not media's problem. He explains that the solution is that people limit themselves when using technology. Pinker wants to encourage people to use the new technology to improve their lives and to use their brainpower to overcome the negative effects of
In the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” Nicholas Carr explains how the Internet is somewhat removing the way humans tend to concentrate on certain things. He also explains how people think differently then they usually would because of how the Internet may cause them to view things. Even though the Internet may help in a variety of ways, it does influence the way humans may think and learn as a process together. Carr’s argument is effective because he shows the affect the Internet has on humans in ways such as, not being able to read lengthy articles and books, the use of a type writer, and the lack of his own creditability within the article.
In his essay “Does the Internet Make You Dumber?”, Nicholas Carr argues that technology leaves us unable to be as thorough in our previous mental abilities and distracts us, through changes to our mental pathways and biological mechanisms. Nicholas Carr uses the appeal of data, the frightening effects of living in the digital age, and his own conclusions from his exhaustive research to structure his examination.
The Internet is something that some consider their lifesavers, while others believe that it takes their life away. The Shallows: What The Internet Is Doing to Our Brains, by Nicholas Carr is a novel that explores the different areas of how new technologies affect humans in different ways, regarding multi-tasking and distractions, to how new technologies make us lose a little part of ourselves. Throughout the book Carr puts forward very strong arguments, but then loses creditability with his use of fallacies in argument.
The internet is an excellent place to explore our mind and put our thoughts together; however, it also has a negative effect to our brains, and the more we use it the more it decrease our intelligence. In this essay “Does the Internet Make You Smarter or Dumber?” by Nicholas Carr, he argues about the immoral side of the internet. According to Carr, “When we’re constantly distracted and interrupted, as we tend to be online, our brains are unable to forge the strong and expansive neural connections that give depth and distinctiveness to our thinking” (22). Carr’s pint of view about the internet is that it does not make us smarter in any way; if anything it make us dense and slow. Scientific study have shown that most people who stayed on the internet quit a lot are more likely to damage their brains mentally. According to Carr, the internet is also a place to waste our time. Carr backed up his arguments with studies from scientists, researches and even books. In these essay, Carr’s appeals to logic and understanding is the strongest; whereas his appeals to ethos and his appeals to pathos are finite.
The internet has revolutionized the world. The internet users can easily access from any data from around the world. However, the internet was also made the users less critical thinkers since the data obtain can be easily found online instead of reading it from a print book. Two sources in particular, Nicholas Carr, “Shallows” and Michael’s Aggers, interview with Clive Thompson “Smarter than you think” have recently argued how the internet has changed our memory and ways of thinking. The internet is bad for your brain because it limits your knowledge of memorization and XXXXXXX .In the book Shallows by Carr, he states. “The arrival of the limitless and easily searchable data banks of the Internet brought a further shift, not just in the way
Media and technology are permeating and changing every part of our lives, but are there consequences to these changes? Nicholas Carr questions if the Internet is helping people as much as it is believed to in his essay, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” With an increased reliance on the Internet, Carr has found patterns of shortened attention in himself and among others. Carr points out frightening changes occurring in human behavior and the workings of the brain that have now become evident in our society’s younger generation and could have devastating consequences.
The internet can be great source of information, but it has a negative effect on the human brain. In Nicholas Carr’s essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid”, he describes how the internet has negatively effected his brain by stating, “Once I was a scuba diver in the sea of words. Now I zip along the surface like a guy on a Jet Ski” (Carr 733). The internet has a huge impact on the thinking process of the human brain and it is completely changing the human ability to concentrate for long periods of time, human reading skills, and the configuration of the brain.
In the Atlantic article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr discusses the changes in a human’s thinking style and concentration ability that have occurred since they start depending on the internet for information. The author begins describing the new struggle that he is facing with reading lengthy texts. He indicates that this change is caused from spending a long time on the internet. Carr noted that this universal medium does not only provide endless benefits for the public, but also shapes the process of their thoughts. The internet is affecting human cognition; therefore, controls their brains, causes lack of capacity to concentrate, and disengages their ability to read, absorb, and interpret articles. The author is not the only
In “Does the Internet Make You Dumber?”,Nicholas Carr come up with a suspect whether the internet will make people become foolish. In other words, internet give us the privilege to get much information, and because of this, people may be distracting from continuous interruption. In the whole passage, author Carr uses several examples to illustrate several opinions that states in the reading. The first opinion is people who use electronic way to get the information can be distracted easier than those who get information in the traditional way. The example reading use to illustrate the point is from Patricia Greenfield, a psychologist.
In his 2008 article, “Is Google making us stupid”, Nicholas Carr makes the claim that the use of the internet is having a detrimental effect on people’s cognition. That by having our attentions constantly interrupted our brains are being rewired causing our attention spans to be shortened and reducing our ability to contemplate on what we are reading. He offers his own experiences with reading printed books and articles and the decline of his concentration and contemplation. While Carr makes some interesting claims, he misses the idea that the internet is not changing our brains in a negative way but is allowing us to free our thoughts. This change could result in reducing the need to retain minor or inconsequential data and it
Recent developments in technology have made life immeasurably easier, but does it come at a cost? Nicholas Carr and Verlyn Klinkenborg both weigh in on how paper and pixel impact the way in which we think, process information, and retain knowledge. In "Does the internet make you dumber?" Nicholas Carr expresses his concern of how the internet hurts the mind.
Nicholas Carr argues that our mind has already been shaped even though we don't use it anymore and this change can not be recovered. He also indicates that to avoid this problem, people should increase their ability to control their attentiveness and their brain, and try not to be interrupted by outer influences. This article is similar with “Mind over mass media” since they both focus on the contribution to people of the Internet. However, this article gives people some instructions about how to avoid such problems, but the previous one is more likely pay attention to encourage people to decrease their time using
The internet is changing our brain for the worse. While we get to communicate with each other better and have a lot of information at our fingertips, we lose many important things as well. We are quick to congratulate the success of Google and Apple that we miss the real danger. Nicholas Carr shows us how we aren't seeing the real danger of the internet and he tells us what we are sacrificing for the internet. He explains to us how the internet is making us easily distracted, removes our ability to think linearly, and weakens our capability to learn.
Are we to busy searching the web to realize how dumb we are becoming? We live in the age of technology, where there is easy access to the Internet. Nicholas Carr, the author of “Does the Internet Make you Dumber?” stated a good question that is relevant to our generation. Since we have easy access to the Internet, it is making us dumber instead of smarter. I believe individuals have taken advantage of the Internet and it is costing them their thinking skills. Sometimes individual don’t realize the impact that the internet has on our brain and education. The author states that the internet comes with distractions, many information, and it models our brains.
The internet has been around for a few decades now and several people are accustomed to using it in their everyday lives. Recently however, an author named Nicholas Carr published a book arguing that the internet is not good for us, and our brains. He claims that the internet is making us into shallow individuals, hence the name of his book, The Shallows: What The Internet Is Doing To Our Brains. After reading this book, I must agree with Carr’s argument that the internet is altering our mindsets.