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.…
In his article “Is Google Making us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr, a Dartmouth and Harvard graduate, and member of encyclopedia Britannica’s editorial board of advisors, poses the argument that the constant use of sources such as Google can reshape the thought process in a negative way. He has found the loss of ability to read for prolonged amounts of time without getting distracted. He is also having a hard time retaining the information he is reading. This made him pose the question of what has caused such a change? The answer that came to him was that it had to be related to the amount of Internet reading, watching, and writing he did. He wasn’t having these…
Through the short story, Is Google Making Us Stupid, the author, Nicholas Carr suggests that the Internet affects how human beings process literary works. He begins to illustrate this point by using a scene from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey where the man purposely disassembles HAL, the supercomputer, in order to disconnect its ability to think for itself. Carr personifies HAL, and describes how it could feel its brain being taken away as the man stripped it of its memory circuits. Carr compares the sensation that the supercomputer endures, when losing its mind, to how the Internet has rewired our human brains. It has made low-concentration levels a norm, and thus, has caused a change in our reading styles: we now immerse in a shallow…
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.…
“Is Google Making Us Stupid?” author Nicholas Carr said “Immersing myself in a book used to be easy. Now my concentration often starts to drift after two or three pages”(Carr, n.pag). Reading short stories, headlines, and blogs on the Internet has changed the way we read. When on the Internet it is so easy just to read short stories, or emails, because they are short, and…
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.…
In class we watched a video from “A Space Odyssey” and read an article called “Is Google Making us Stupid?” The video is about a robot acting like a human and refusing to do what the human is telling him to do. In this case it is like the human is the robot. The tone makes it very scary. “Is Google Making us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr is about his idea that the internet is taking over and is affecting the way that the human mind operates. Carr relates it to his personal life and talks about how the internet has changed the way that he reads and has shortened his attention span. On one hand I agree with Carr’s idea that the internet is taking over. But on the other hand, I still insist that it has not fully to blame for the laziness of the people. Technology has both positive and negative development. Human thought is one of the centers of the world and it is sometimes uncomfortable and scary to think that this might change. Most people…
In “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” Nicholas Carr expresses his concerns on how the Internet is changing the way his mind works and how it’s affecting him in a negative way. Carr suggests that the Internet offers us the benefit of quick and easy knowledge. However, he goes into details about how we merely rely on Google that makes us process information differently from the past and how it’s degrading our critical-thinking skill. Moreover, he touches upon his own experience how accessible the Internet is with hyperlinks and flashy ads that can divert his attention from reading. With this, he noticed that his capacity on concentration for reading has been taken away. Carr proved that others have experienced the same thing that he did…
Search engines such as google are making our society’s IQ go down faster every year. An everyday human being relies on google to help them find simple answers that most people should already know. Nicholas Carr makes various points on how google or other programs are making people stupid. Carrs essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid” shows us how search engines are in fact making us dumb.…
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…
Where can college students find some important data at the midnight when all the libraries close? The answer is: if they search on Google and they can get whatever they want. Doesn’t it sound pretty convenient while the student who gets in trouble? Absolutely! However, this kind of approach caused the college students to think less. Nicholas Carr says in the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid, “The more they use the Web, the more they have to fight to stay focused on long pieces of writing” (Is Google Making Us Stupid? 17). People are living with the help of the Google currently. Google is like a double-edged sword. It not only brings students good matters but also the bad things.…
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.…
In Conclusion, Google can make us feel omniscient. The internet is, indeed making certain users lazy or in Carr’s term “stupid”. The internet supplies us with many distractions which in return forces us to “skim through information.” We don’t get a full understanding about things if our choice of educating ourselves is by glancing atinformation. This is also the case if we were to pick up a book and just read a few pages and expect to get a full understanding about the content. Carr agrees that the internet is a great tool, but the way in which we are using it is what is causing a lack of intelligence and users are starting to have a shorter attention span. The bottom line is that the internet is making us less smarter,ruining our ability for creative input and deep…
When going to a public computer or opening the laptop of friend, and starting up whichever internet browser available it is common to see that famous six letter word known worldwide, Google. Just out of me and my six roommates, four of us have Google as our homepage, and all seven of us use google as our primary search engine and source for email. It goes to show google has made its way to the top of proverbial internet resource pyramid, and rightfully so. In “Reverse Engineering Google’s Innovation Machine” Bala Iyer and Thomas Davenport go in to great detail as to how Google has been able to rise to the to such a successful organization and be able to prosper at a rate like none other.…