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
In his article entitled Is Google Making Us Stupid?, Carr expresses his concern over the way the internet is changing our brains. Every since he started skim reading on the internet he’s lost his ability to read for a long time; “Now my concentration often starts to drift after two or three pages. I get fidgety, lose the thread, begin looking for something else to do” (Carr 314). Our minds have adapted to reading on the internet. We take in vast amounts of information in a short period of time and so anything that’s long can’t hold our attention. We are no longer to analyze and think deeply about texts because we can’t focus for that long. I definitely feel the effect of skim reading. I do read a lot but I don’t deep read. Whenever I’m trying
When assessing the risks of digital technology’s role in our future, many reflect on the developments of new technology throughout history. Nicholas Carr, author of “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” uses historical examples to support his claim that we should fear technological advancements. In contrast, Brooke Gladstone and Josh Neufeld, authors of “The Influencing Machines,” examine both sides of the issue and ultimately conclude that we should not fear technological development. One technological development Carr as well as Gladstone and Neufeld examined was the printing press. Carr asserts that most of the arguments about the printing press turned out to be correct including that it “would undermine religious authority, demean the work of scholars
In “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, by Nicholas Carr, he describes the correlation between Internet usage and common reading abilities. While informing the audience about the decreasing reading habits and the power of the Net.
In Nicholas Carr (Is Google Making Us Stupid?) he expresses his thoughts of the internet, and how it is effecting our minds. He goes in on how it becomes hard to comprehend long articles and books. It seems as if our brains start to become unfocused as we try not to skim the words; yet, or brains do as they please causing us to become distracted from the writings in front of us.
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.
In, “Is Google Really Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr (2008), he validates how people are heavily relying on the internet pushing for Artificial Intelligence. Carr also talks about how it is changing the way our minds work with negative side effects. He demonstrates how the internet may be shaping our thought process by giving observational examples as well as personal experiences. Beginning with his personal experiences he says how he finds it difficult to keep focused on a book, as a writer, this is rare to him. He tries to find a reason to his inability to stay focused and comes to a conclusion it is due to the internet. Carr is very persuasive in his article, although his point of view maybe seen as an opinion, he does show and support
In “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr (2008), the author talks about how the internet affects our life in many ways. He states his argument, “And what the Net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation” (4). People associate with the internet everyday as a daily habit, but they do not know that it is slowly changing their life in some ways such as our reading behavior, attention and an actual knowledge people have.
Do you believe the Internet changes the way the mind develops? The internet is making us look at the world in a more unclear way. As a today’s generation people depends on too much technology. However, there are two articles that provides two different perspectives about the issues. In the first article, “Why Google Isn’t Making Us Stupid… or Smart” by Chad Wellmon, he talks to us about how Google is not actually making us stupid. In fact, Wellmon gives us a different point of view about how the Internet has helped us out in many different ways. In the second article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr, he give us great reasons for why he feels Google isn't making us any smarter. Carr fears that the Internet will soon brainwash
An article published in The Atlantic entitled “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” criticizes to what effect the internet has on our cognition. Despite the title of the article, technology writer Nicholas Carr does not target Google specifically, but rather the World Wide Web as a whole; moreover, he attributes his recent troubles concentrating while reading books and more-lengthy articles to the long hours he has been spending on the internet.
I recently read Mr. Nicholas Carr's article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, and I must say I do agree with Carr somewhat, but I strongly disagree. In the beginning of the article, Carr states that a few years ago he could read in-depth and for pages on an Internet article. Now, he says, that he cannot help but “skim” through an article in seconds; he feels that Internet search engines like “Google” (I list it specifically hence the article's title) make information so very accessible and immediate that it damages his reading. Although I can sympathize for him, I can not say I empathize because I am a different person with a different way of reading and thinking.
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.
Is Google making us stupid? Nicholas Carr posed the question via “The Atlantic” in 2008 and received an uproar of feedback. His argument was that the internet might have detrimental effects on cognitive capacity. The article in itself, according to online critics, was targeted more at the World Wide Web than at Google, specifically. Throughout the six page piece, he argued that reading on the internet is a shallower comparison to putting your nose in a book. Since then, the topic has been widely debated.
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
These days it may seem like technology can be over bearing and start to take over our life and in some cases for some people hurt them by “distracting” them from an assignment. Although what’s the real cost of technology. It’s easy for old people to judge the younger generations and say oh we are distracted by all the new gadgets and technology and are ungrateful and lazy UN motivated because of it but is that really the truth? How could a professor that was born in a whole entire different generation tell us what he thinks is to be true? Over the years things have changed society has morphed into something entirely different. Mark Bauerlein doesn’t understand change because he is not even from the same generation he was born in 1959 things
How many times have you heard your parents exclaim to you, “You’re not paying attention because your always on your phone!” I have been accused by this quote more than enough times I’d like during my lifetime, but Google isn’t making me lose focus or getting distracted. As most people believe, Google is making our society crumble because it is making us stupid. But actually, that isn’t the case. Google, the famous search engine used by many, is used to research information on someone or something. Although many may disagree, it is clear that Google is not dumbing us down because Google can open our eyes to new things and it can unleash our creativity.