Is Google Making Us Stupid?
What is it about google/internet that we are so addicted to? In “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr we learn that google/internet is something we us in everyday life. Google/internet is a resource that we go to when we can not find the answers we are looking for in a textbook. Google could be good if you do not have the right sources for work or when at home trying to make stuff. The bad thing about google is that everyone in this generation relies on google/internet too much to see what it is like to have fun and go out with friends. Nowadays kids just use their cell phones for everything, I do not remember that last time I saw a child pick up a book to read just for fun and not for school.
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These kids can easily go onto google to look up anything they want without anyone knowing because of their phones. Google has answers for kids who want to learn things that they are afraid to ask their parents because they are embarrassed of it. Even teenagers under than college students use the internet/google to find answers for homework instead of their textbooks. Kids do not know who to start up a conversation with other people because they are use to their phones being in there hands and texting on it. Teenagers nowadays do not show up of communication with each other or adults because they are use to texting everything they want to say to one …show more content…
We use google or anything on the internet everyday every hour for our own use. Technology gets to our minds and makes us forget even the most common things. “As we come to rely on computers to mediate our understanding of the world, it is our own intelligence that flattens into artificial intelligence”(Carr 332). We rely on technology more than books this day in age. The last time I saw a kid younger than a six graders reading a book was when they had to do a book report. Kids do not know what reading could do to them. Kids can learn things from the books they read and have fun reading books that they are interested in because it was their favorite movie they saw. All of us rely on technology not just kids, we all use technology because it is right in our hands or on our laps or desk for work. We are too lazy to read a book or article to do our homework, so we just google the answers. Sometimes I wonder what we would do without the use of technology and what would we do if social media was a thing? The world of everyone that uses technology and not being able to would make everyone confused because they do not know what to with their
I must admit that I have Google set as my homepage and before actually thinking how much I know about a particular topic, I automatically “google” the topic. I realized how much it has affected my cognitive ability and overall concentration. Our brain is constantly making new connections, therefore taking on qualities of the technology around us. The way humans explain themselves to others is changing because of the way we are unconsciously adapting to “intellectual technologies.” This means that we are allowing the information we read on the internet to alter the way we view not only ourselves, but the world around us as well.
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.
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
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
Carr gives Google credit where it is due, but he also accuses this plethora of easily accessible information of "chipping away [my] capacity for concentration and contemplation" (Carr 390). Being able to obtain any information at anytime does give people a reason to not store any knowledge or worry about remembering important things--if you forget something, you can just look it up again. It is easy to see how Carr considers this a negative effect of technology playing such a large role in
Most Americans use the internet daily. Although it is very useful, it is also very hurtful to the brains of everyone. Nicholas Carr goes into detail about why he feels this way in his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”. This article mentions researches and opinions from not only Carr, but from outsiders as well. Carr explains his reasons on why he feels the internet has limited the knowledge of everyone. The main reason that Carr argues is that our brains have the ability to reprogram themselves due to the use of the internet and I agree with him because we do not dig into books like in the past, we get on our social medias instead, however, I disagree with him because computers and the internet have helped the world tremendously with technology
With the rise of technology, society is beginning to wonder if it is helping or hurting us. Many people privileged enough to have technology, argue that though technology is helping the world advance, it is altering our thoughts and perceptions. In Nicholas Carr’s article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid” he blatantly calls out the current generation and expresses his concerns about how the internet is changing the way people interpret information. Carr’s main claim is that the internet is causing people to lose their ability to concentrate and think on their own. Google can affect our cognition but depending on its uses it can make people smarter.
In the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” Nicholas Carr explains how the Internet is somewhat removing the way humans tend to concentrate on certain things. He also explains how people think differently then they usually would because of how the Internet may cause them to view things. Even though the Internet may help in a variety of ways, it does influence the way humans may think and learn as a process together. Carr’s argument is effective because he shows the affect the Internet has on humans in ways such as, not being able to read lengthy articles and books, the use of a type writer, and the lack of his own creditability within the article.
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.
Most people in today’s society have been affected by how simple technology makes our lives. Considering they’re hand held computers, it makes sense. All of this technology at our fingertips has also brought upon its negative outcomes. Technology has created a false world that we consume ourselves with on a daily basis.
In his essay, “Is Google Making us Stupid,” Nicholas Carr addresses the fears that many people share about the World Wide Web: that it is rerouting our brains, making it difficult to concentrate effectively. Carr uses personal experiences about his loss of concentration that has become more evident after using the internet. Rather than reading texts in-depth, our brains have become accustomed to skimming over information. Carr’s view on technology is that by relying on knowledge that we are being handed, we are becoming humans with artificial thoughts. He fears the internet could be a monster living in our homes. He is afraid of technology making us an indolent race. I think that the internet can make us lazy, but that doesn’t necessarily correlate to becoming “stupid.” Carr only focuses on the negative altercations that the internet has on our lives. Due to this, he comes off as oblivious to the transformation that we are undergoing with this new technology. The internet is making us change our focus from absorbing time consuming information. Instead, we have shifted our attention to learning information in a timely manner. Over the years, more ways to access the internet have emerged, opening up a whole new world for us. Instead of socializing and working in print, we are delving into a “visual world.” Alternatively, we are being introduced into being able to personally create, develop and consume information. Hearing information from a teacher is being substituted for
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
“Is Google Making Us Stupid?” is an article that contemplates whether or not google is good for the mind or if it is just making us dumb. They go on to talk about the typewriter and how in that period of time you had to think about what you said and you learned more because there was not internet. You did not read about something online but you read out of a book. Reading online is like reading in bits and pieces. When you read something from the internet you are learning the information in parts, you are not learning the whole story, but a sugar down version. The author (Nicholas Carr) feels that by using google or any internet site we are making our mind much more simple than what it could be. I agree with the fact that google is making us think less and talk differently. Carr says by using the internet for research or online reading we are making ourselves we are losing content, but if we pick up a book we will retain much more information.
Nicholas Carr is an American author who writes the majority of books and articles about the continuously evolving world of technology and how it is effecting our society. Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains, was a 2011 Pulitzer Prize finalist and a New York Times bestseller. In this essay I will be rhetorically analyzing Carr’s essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid” published in 2008. The purpose of Carr’s essay was to bring light to an issue that many of us face but only a meniscal few have come to terms with; and that is that technology is mentally incapacitating our society and simultaneously making us lazy. This essay was intended for anyone was has been consumed in today’s culture by new technological advances to the extent of not being able to function without some sort of device, IE cellphone, laptop or tablet on a daily basis.
It is true that people are becoming more and more reliant on the internet to do everyday tasks. I feel that Carr addresses the issue perfectly in his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid”. If we continue to use technology for everything, we will eventually lose all ability to deep read and make those critical connections that are necessary for true comprehension and application. He indicates that “the more [he] uses the web, the more he has to fight to stay focused on long pieces of writing” (736). Knowing how difficult it was to read and analyze Carr’s article myself, I fully agree with his claims. Having grown up in a world that has always had technology, I must be hyper-cognizant of the task at hand when it comes to something such as reading, particularly if it is something that I deem less than interesting. When I was finally able to get through the entire essay, I started to think about how much I use the internet. I must admit that