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.
I believe that Google is not making us stupid but instead teaching us new things about
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Using the internet, ideas of inventions and unique creations will start to flow to the surface and someone will create something amazing gathering the ideas on Google and from their own personality. According to a debate article on The Atlantic.com, “ I’d say that my creativity has been fueled by letting myself fall into occasional rabbit holes” (The Internet’s Impact on Creativity: Your Thoughts, Rosa Inocencio Smith). This quote helps prove my point because it explains how Google helps this person think of more unique drawings because the occasional glance at other art or pictures helps let them get their creative juices flowing more. To me, Google gets me inspired to draw things. For most people, this is the case also. Their creative side gets to go crazy and think up amazing things if they search up something on Google. Since there are hundreds of thousands of pictures and websites that are on Google, many people can use them as inspiration for something they want to create. In short, looking up images and websites on Google can spark some unique ideas for people and they will most likely end up creating magnificent
While reading a famous article by Nicholas Carr titled “Is Google Making us Stupid?,” I have concluded that it is not. I disagree with Carr’s argument because his view point corresponds with how technology is advancing. The way that the internet has shaped our lives has taken a great toll on the way we view the world now. There are a couple of ways that technology is improving. One would include books that are paperback turning into nooks and kindles along with blogging and texting. Another study shows that our brains are also changing and growing along with the internet. This shows that technology had advanced from the 70’s and 80’s when there wasn’t widespread access to the internet.
Is Google numbing our minds? Carr claims that we are so heavily reliant on Google, that it is impeding our own mental thinking and capacity; he says that we need to rely less on Google and we need to start to rely more on our own thinking. As a result of Google, it has become the focal point of our thinking in today’s society. We no longer use our own knowledge and understanding to look up information, but rather we use Google to do our own dirty work according to Carr. Essentially, Google has numbed our minds by making us so lazy and reliant on it.
of “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” published in 2008 in the Atlantic, believes that the internet is “tinkering with our brains” and has even admitted to seeing changes within himself. Carr created this article to inform people about how societies ability to read and comprehend information is being changed or harmed by the use of the internet. Carr did have some errors such as structural problems with his thesis and also struggled with an informal writing style. Despite some of these errors, Carr’s use of rhetorical techniques such as ethos, pathos, logos, and ample amount of personal and factual information along with the emotional touches, allows him to develop a strong persuasive argument.
The debate over the internet's influence on human minds has been long running. Nicholas Carr's "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" article successfully defends both opinions on this issue. He has plenty of history on the topic and has seen much success in previous works. Carr uses his past to impact the present issue society is challenged with every day. With his background on the subject, Carr is able to establish credibility as a speaker before he reasons for both sides of the debate successfully.
There comes a point where man simply stop searching for the answers themselves. It becomes too tedious to put in effort, They want the simplicity that comes from someone or should I say something giving them the answer this is taking the intellectual ability away from mankind and Nicholas Carr a writer tells about that in his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Published in The Atlantic. In this article car explain how the internet has not only affected his reading capability but others as well by affecting concentration while reading. Carr tries to reach different drawings of people from people who read The Atlantic to those who simply use the internet, Carr is trying to inform these people that Google is having a negative effect on society. Nicholas Carr successfully uses the rhetorical appeal of logos to convince his audience that the internet may be making society dumb.
The internet is a technology which has had a significant impact on the way many people conduct their lives. Information once contained in massive volumes at libraries or in private collections is now available by typing words into a search engine and clicking “search.” One must no longer pick up a phone to call a friend, relative or colleague; e-mail, instant messaging, Skype and the like, have enabled people to communicate in non-traditional ways and across boundaries previously inaccessible. Nicholas Carr addresses the wonder that is the internet in his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” The general direction of the article is a discussion of how intelligent thought patterns seem to be changing; attention spans and critical
Nicholas Carr stated a couple true statements, but I disagree that google is making us stupid. In the article, Carr explained how reading has drastically increased throughout the years. He is indeed correct about this. During this generation, people rely on the internet to provide accurate essential facts, which one can gain valuable knowledge from. Those who skim through articles or never read a book due to losing concentration after reading three pages are not lacking intelligence, but lack ambition and motivation.
In his essay, “Is Google Making us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr discusses societies dependence to easily accessible information. Since the inception of the internet and search engines, information has been accessible to us instantly. Although instant access to information is a desirable advancement in technology, it comes with questionable consequences. From his own personal experience, Carr explains that since this invention, his brain feels as if it has been tinkered with. Carr explains that his brain does not work the way it used to, that it’s very hard for him to become engrossed in books, articles, or essays. As he continued to try to become engrossed in these readings, he found that his thoughts would wander and he would become restless after just a few
The Article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr, has a persuasive and emphasized narrative, into depicting how the Internet has taken prominence of the human mind, explaining that people in todays modern age have lost the aptitude to engage deep reading, because the internet has revolutionized into a manipulating tool, that lets us easily access information with a simple click of a button from a computer and the result is that we are becoming insipid readers. Furthermore, he continues to criticize the Internet as a power system that extracts data from search engines to control the way that humans thinks and to distracts us so they can attain ultimate power over us. Carr, has a strong argument but fails to acknowledge the fact, that our
In Nicholas Carr's story "Is Google Making Us Stupid" his fundamental point is the issue, is fast access to the web making people more restless to peruse and need to skim through stuff more. This story is an extremely well useful story. Carr uses google as a similitude for the more extensive web. At the point when Carr poses the question is google making us inept, he may have set an alert for some. In the story he gets profound clarification of how the web impacts the cerebrum. The clarification he gives us is the way PCs have modified the way we work, how we sort out data, offer news, convey, and how we hunt down, read, and assimilate data. Carr's investigation joins research, and additionally reasoning, science, history, and social advancements.
For almost two decades, Google has surely been the top dog of search engines on the worldwide internet. Beginning as a research project by two college students, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, called Backrub, Google has now become the answer to all questions. Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and make it accessible and useful. According to Niholas Carr’s article “Is Google Making Us Stupid” he states that our use of the internet has serious effects on the way we real, think, and live. Carr’s struggle along with his friends who he’s said are experiencing these same struggles, seem to be putting the blame on the internet for their lack of attentiveness, when there can be other underlying issues other than excessive use of the web affecting your brain.
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
Nicholas Carrs article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” makes points that I agree with, although I find his sources to be questionable. The article discusses the effects that the Internet may be having on our ability to focus, the difference in knowledge that we now have, and our reliance on the Internet. The points that are made throughout Carrs article are very thought provoking but his sources make them seem invaluable.
In the July-August 2008 Atlantic magazine, Nicholas Carr published "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" (http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200807/google). In this article Nicolas Carr argues that the internet is changing how one thinks, and how it is causing a bad effect on one’s brain. I have to disagree. Although the internet is constantly changing, it helps in a positive way. Firstly, google has become a great resource for educational purposes. Secondly, the internet has become a great resource for intercultural experiences. Due to the general population spending most of their time on computer’s and smart phones, this information is accessible to us whenever needed.
People are adapting, and changing their approach of how they seek knowledge: From hours, and hours of researching in the library to find information, to a five-second research on the internet with a click of a button? In an ever-changing world, humans are evolving with the ease of technology. The google search engine allows the users to search anything with the tip of their fingers. The World Wide Web has billions of website with information. People can search anything they want to know about. The innovation of the Google search engine surpassed its competitors because of its sophisticated algorithm. Is the Google search engine changing the way we think? Some people believe Google is making people stupid because