Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr talks about the way technology is effecting our lives, negatively. Carr goes on to tell of his attention span has dramatically decreased due to technology. The cause of that is the fact that we can find everything so fast, everything is available on the internet now. This fact is causing dependency one the easier and faster way toto get certain information, great example is technology again. Carr claims that technology does so much for people today that is more important than people. Carr explains that humans need to focus on more important aspects of life like reading and writing than technology. Carr even goes on to talk about a technology that will replace our brains that Google is working on.
Technology nowadays always use to have so much information at our fingertips, but is this a good thing? That is what Jamais Cascio’s “Get Smarter” and Nicholas Carr’s “Is Google Making Us Stoopid?” both discuss; they specifically address the effects that new technology, such as the internet, has on the way humans think. The difference is that Carr argues that this new technology is making us stupid while Cascio argues that it is making us smarter. Nicholas Carr’s article discusses the negative effects of the internet and technology like it. It specifically mentions slight changes in the way people do things because of the influence of technology and gives many historical and anecdotal examples. Jamais Cascio’s article is about the advancements of technology and how it is makes people smarter. Cascio talks about Twitter, mental enhancement drugs and AIs, focusing a lot on the benefits of the advancements.
Technology has evolved so much over the course of 82 years. People who were living in 1935 would have no clue what a computer is or what it could potentially become. Education itself and how we learn has come a long way. Everything was hand written. Now in 2017, we have every answer with just one touch of a button. Google is a search engine that holds almost every answer in the world. There are many opinions on the way humans in 2017 function, and process information. Nicholas carr is a respect author who writes about the relationship between technology and culture. He has written for the Atlantic, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, etc. He has written two great essay that have won The Best American Science and Nature Writing, The Best collected in Several Anthologies, The Best American Science and Nature Writing, and The Best Technology Writing. One of them which is titled, “Is Google Making Us Stupid.” Nicholas Carr argues that Google is not making humans stupid, but as technology progress our minds must adapt and change the way we think and process information. This essay has many rhetorical approaches. Nicholas Carr uses imagery, opinion, ethos, and pathos to persuade his audience, provoking a doubt on whether google is making humans stupid.
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.
The internet
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
In a society where computers are used on a daily basis, is there a chance that Google is affecting our minds in a negative way? Nicholas Carr, who has written many articles on technology, business, and culture, argues that the use of Google is steadily making us less intelligent. Although, in most aspects most people may agree with what Carr is saying, but where is the experimental evidence that shows if Google is actually making us stupid? The argument that Carr presents in "Is Google Making Us Stupid" is difficult to fully side with considering he fails to present actual evidence, while relying only on his assumptions from his own experiences, and the viewpoints of other writers.
The internet is one of the many technologies to come about in this fast pace and ever evolving world. Within these new technologies, such as the internet, one can see how even people have evolved and changed their ways of thinking to keep up. One aspect of this change is the way people understand and think about what they read or see. In Nicholas Carr’s Is Google Making Us Stupid, the author present the idea that the use of the internet is the reason behind the changes within the minds of its users. This idea points towards the internet being both a mind altering and convenience mechanism; as well as being easily abused by its users. This allows Carr to effectively propose the idea that the internet, and technology in general, is used not only as a convenience mechanism, but also has a way to change how its uses think. However, Carr ineffectively represents how this change comes about due to user abuse of new technology like the internet.
How often do you use Google, Bing, or any other internet search engine on a daily basis? Each time you search for something you are bombarded with information, constantly absorbing said information. Nicholas Carr, author of the article “Google Is Making Us Stupid,” states that Google is changing the way he and many others think. However, with the constant influx of information presented in a Google search, our brains have the option to expand and retain more information than ever before. Access to these search engines provides us with a breadth of information never before conceived. If there is anything on any subject that you want to know,
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
There can be multiple reasons on why technology is helpful and why it is not helpful. In “Social Media as Community” talks about the effects of social media on people’s relationship, in “Is Google Making Us Stupid” discusses the pros and cons of search engines, and in “Attached to Technology and Paying a Price” it talks about the effects of juggling various technologies on the human brain. All these articles have a lot in common like not liking technology or liking it. We should have technology because there are a lot of benefits that come from it.
For lack of a better phrase, technology is a safe bet. Whether society counts the various
Samara Ross-Ziemelis Mr. Fischer - English 10 Argument DCA Friday, Feb. 26, 2016 “How Technology Has Affected Us As Individuals” Technology seems like such a vital impact on all of our lives that most of us think we can’t live without it. Sure, the technology used in medical fields, science, engineering, etc. is such a big change from the way things were only a century ago that we likely couldn’t live without it. Although technology has made incredible advancements, are people losing the ability to talk to one another in a face-to-face situation?
Technology has improved the average life of millions of people. Tasks that would previously take hours to finish are completed in a matter of minutes. For example, in the article “In Defense of Technology”, author Andrew O’Hagan recalls a memory he has of a favorite record that he would listen to growing up. He remembers taking a bus and a train, and walking for miles to buy the record. As much as he adores the record, he states that the song only took him 15 seconds
Technology has improved the average life of millions of people. Tasks that would previously take hours to finish are now completed in a matter of minutes. For example, in the article “In Defense of Technology”, author Andrew O’Hagan recalls a memory he has of a favorite record that he would listen to growing up. He remembers taking a bus and a train, and walking for miles to buy the record. As much as he loves the record, he states “the song is right here at the ends of my fingertips as I’m typing, and … it took me just under fifteen second to locate
aspect of life and now they find difficult to comprehend along with the fast growing of