Andrew Brown once said, “The Internet is so big, so powerful and pointless that for some people it is a complete substitute for life.” However is that truly the case with today’s technology, is the internet pointless. It is possible however the internet offers education and learning opportunities but again does the good outweigh the bad. Well that is a matter of prospective. In Nickolas Carr prospective it does not, this can be based off of reading “Is Google Making Us Stupid” by him. In the article he shows proof of his beliefs and ideals within his main statements. An example of one is when he talks about his focus issues, and how he can no longer be completely immersed in a book because he starts to fidgety while reading. He then talks
In Nicholas Carr’s “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, he discusses the negative impacts that technology has had on human intelligence and how technology is going to pass up humankind. Carr’s main point is that point is that due to modern innovations like the internet, himself and the rest of mankind have slowly lost the ability to read in-depth and focus on complex tasks. He also argues that companies like google are working to create innovations in Artificial Intelligence, causing technology to eventually pass up humanity. Carr believes that technology is important, but it will eventually lead to our demise.
In this book the Shallows Nicholas Carr explains what the internet is doing to our brains. He explains in great detail how , sometimes he is a little long winded. But he usually gets his point out at one point. Honestly I was lost on a few parts of the book. So that was enjoyable at all. The parts I did understood was great. I actually was learning exactly what the internet is doing to our brains. And it made me stop and think, should I stop doing the things i’m doing on the internet. I related with a lot of things Carr said throughout the book. I realized that I used Google way too much. In the book Carr asks, Is Google making us stupid?. At first I thought about this question I answered no. Then later on as I was working on vocabulary instead
Each and everyday around the world there are new advances in technology attempting to make life more simple. In the article by Nicholas Carr, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, Carr explains his beliefs on how the internet is causing mental issues in today's society. Carr starts with his own opinion, he says the Internet is causing him to lose focus quickly. He cannot stay hooked to a book. He writes about his life being surrounded by the internet and how it has created problems, like not being able to stay focused on a reading; but it is interesting how he says the Internet has been a ‘godsend’ in his chosen profession. Carr uses a great deal of rhetorical appeals to try to connect with the audience. He compares the past and the present and how it has altered the
In Nicholas Carr’s article entitled, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?,” he explains that the up rise of computers, and technology, has taken a toll on the former ability to read and understand what is being read. Suddenly, what was once so simple is now a prolonged, agonizing task which readers like Carr have experienced. The infamous internet has become the basis for information people seek to collect. Personally, I think Carr’s interpretation of the increase in technology is most accurate when referring to the overtake of artificial intelligence, the inability to read small to large amounts of written work, and the obvious change in the way we think as a person.
When you have a question, need to look up a fact, or need help with research where do you go? Google. Google is always there to help you and solve all your problems. In the article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid.” briefly talks about how Nicholas Carr lost most of his concentration and focus while writing. Using google, or the net in general is a convenient tool that makes everyone's life easier. Since its quick and easy to get what you’re looking for through the internet, it’s made Nick’s ability to read a long article and understand it harder. As he spends time writing, he ends up getting fidgety, loses his train of thought, and wants to be doing something else. Deep reading normally comes natural to people, but for Nick, it has now became
Carr starts at his paper in a first point of view. He expresses his feelings that the internet is changing his own personal thinking. This man is an author, he's born to read and even he says that he's having problems because he can no longer read anymore. Carr says that “the web has been a godsend” (Carr), but he also explained it's not only a
In the article “Is Google making us stupid?” Nicholas Carr is arguing that the internet and the computer are making our reading abilities less and our attention span lower. In the article, he is saying that people are immersing themselves in the computer screens and t.v. shows which are making their minds “less efficient.” Furthermore, he examined that every new technology such as the typewriter and the printing press has put persons less capable of understanding and comprehending than before. First, he gave us the example of the Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, where the computer is taking over the human. Nest, the examples is off ,Friedrich Nietzsche, a writer failing to express himself to his friend in a personal letter after he
Many people are being distracted these days by the overuse of technology. It has become very difficult for people to focus on one task at a time. Also, people are forgetting some old ways of increasing their intelligence and ways of developing skills. In the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” By Nicholas Carr, he argues that internet restricts the minds from increasing our ability to fully understand what we read online. He also argues that spending “too much” time online causes to lose the focus and train our minds to think more like machines. Also, in the article “Why Gen-Y Johnny Can’t Read Nonverbal Cues” by Mark Bauerlein, he argues that people are less interactive because of the more use of texting and online chatting. He argues that
The uses of technology like computers and cell phones are growing every day with new uses and forms. There are mixed feelings about if technology is making us smarter or stupider thru out day to day life. Nicolas Carr a New York Times writer wrote an article about “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” and he tries to show people that computers are making our lives simpler and there for making us as humans stupid. Another writher that goes by the name Greg is a writer for digitaltonto.com, and he found the previous article and wrote “How Computers Change the Way We learn” which is about how all lot of the facts in Carr article could have been read to say anything that the author wanted, so he could make people believe.
Instead of social media, the Internet is also a kind of technology which benefits education by improving one’s knowledge through an easy access of information. Because of the advanced technology, the Internet has become a useful tool for education. In the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr, Larry Page who founded Google states, “Google is really trying to build artificial intelligence and to do it on a large scale” (5). There is no doubt that online search engines are as smart as human, or even smarter than us. Because of this, we tend to get help from the Internet to do our work. For example, students may surf the Internet for information and use the online calculator for solving mathematical problems. It is really a beneficial
I am sitting on the train, reading the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” on my laptop while listening to latest hip-hop music, typing up my essay and drinking my morning coffee. I take a moment to acknowledge how easier my life is because I rely on technology to do most of my work. I quickly glance out the window to see that I still have three more stops before I have to get off. As I regain my focus back to my laptop, I notice an old woman sitting next to me writing in her notebook. I notice the book contains her daily plans, and say to myself “Wow someone needs a reality check! It’s the twenty-first century for goodness sake!” I carry on with my work until the train conductor announces “Next Stop Temple University”. I begin gathering
Nicholas Carr’s 2008 article in The Atlantic, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, argues that the Internet and access to vast amounts of information is corroding the attention spans and thought complexity of the billions of Internet users around the world. As Carr himself puts it, “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) He proposes that having many different sources at once will cause readers to skip around sporadically rather than thoughtfully consume information, and that Google has an agenda to cause this behavior due to their economic interests. Overall, Carr paints a cynical outlook on the prevalence in Google and any societal changes stemming from its use. David Weir’s 2010
What is technology and how can it be defined? “Technology is anything that wasn’t around when you were born,” and he would be right (Alan Kay). Nonetheless, it is also much more: cellular devices, internet networks, and social media, but could technology also be a ballpoint pen, door hinges, or an interstate sign? Absolutely, as it does not have to be plugged-in in order to serve a purpose to our daily lives. More specifically, the World Wide Web and social media integrate with our mind and intellectual abilities. Prior to reading “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr, the arrangement of the Internet seemed quite simple and I believed it was my fault for the distraction but, after I finished reading I can conclude that the techniques
On Carr's stance on the question, is Google making us stupid, I would be compelled to disagree with him and say that it's actually making us smarter. His idea of saying that we are becoming stupid because of Google is a paradox because we learn so much every day from going to Google and researching something and he's saying that his ability to concentrate is diminishing. Instances that actually enable us to become smarter by using Google would be the way we can instantly find information, because of the internet we are now reading far more than we did in the 1970s, and because of how we read on the internet, we changed our style of reading to a style that puts efficiency and immediacy above everything. We are just adapting to a new type of
In the book The Shallows by Nicholas Carr focuses on the issue of the Internet becoming our second nature to us humans and replacing everything we know now with technology in a passage that appears in a chapter called, “Hal and Me.” Nicholas Carr opens the passage by writing, “The net has become my all-purpose medium…” (Carr 6). Next, he indicates that having access to so much material in a matter of seconds that he has all this time on his hands to spend like a kid in a candy shop. Following that, Carr points out how other people, such as Bruce Friedman, a blogger who talks about the internet changing his mental state, have “almost totally lost the ability to read and absorb a longish article on the web or in print” (Carr 7). Finally, Carr closes the passage by stating reading books in the modern times is obsolete or even weird to see someone reading rather than using the internet. Some might be troubled by what Carr says. They would argue that using the internet lets you absorb information faster and more efficient than pushing through chapters of a book is a better way to think about the issue. On the other hand, Carr’s position on this issue is good one for several reasons. One is that people are losing interest completely with reading books or anything that involves having long, intensive focus because of the internet. We can see why this idea makes sense if we consider the following