After reading the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr, our group came to a decision that we agreed with Carr. Google is, in fact, making us stupid. Throughout the article, Carr emphasizes how our minds are changing as a result of the time we spend online. Throughout the article, Carr makes the argument that the internet has affected how human beings process and retain information. The problem with the internet that Carr addresses are that media does not just supply information to the users, it also shapes the thoughts that flow in the people's minds. Many times a reader will be browsing the web and see pop-up ads that apply to a website they recently were on. This shifts the reader's attention from the site they are on, onto the ad itself. …show more content…
His mind has a way of wandering off on its own and not getting attached to the plot of the story. Our group agreed that it is hard to read after being so immersed in our homes it is hard to get into a good book, or even read at all. Our attention spans have been limited to the size of our computer screens, or how fast we can scroll. Our group found many other things that we agreed is affected by the internet; sleep, devices put off a “blue light” that has an effect on the brain and the amount of melatonin it releases. Humans need melatonin in order to sleep or feel tired. Sleep deprivation can have a big impact on your life, it can cause people to get bad grades, eat less, get headaches, and even pay attention.
In Nicholas Carr’s writing, “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” mentions multiple examples of why the internet and the simplicity of looking up and getting exactly what we were looking for are causing a drop in the way we think and the intelligence of our minds. Carr explains that he was once a huge reader and could comprehend ten to fifteen-page articles easily, but the directness of the internet had dulled his brain that he could not read a few paragraphs before he gave up and his mind started drifting off into the emptiness of his brain. Carr mentions that the Net is being the universal medium causing information that is read and learned go in one ear and out the other. Carr defends his positions by adding multiple examples showing that the Net
Nicholas Carr’s essay, "Is Google Making Us Stupid?” on the other hand is a very different approach to language, more specifically about the language used in relation to technology. Carr begins this essay with a personal observation that he is losing his ability to read for long periods of time. He claims that the internet is to blame for deterioration of attention people now experience when reading. This is because people are developing a new way of reading in which Freidman refers to as “skimming”(Carr) that allowing them to hastily read things without actually taking in the semantic meaning.
Nicholas Carr’s article titled Is Google Making us Stupid was written to deliver an urgent message to the reader. Carr’s purpose for writing this article was to inform the masses of the potential dangers in how new technologies change the ways our minds work. He is trying to warn us how writing has reduced our capability to remember details in our heads, just like the internet has been able to change the way our brains store, acquire, and handle information. The author makes the argument that Carr makes a reference to the movie 2001 A Space Odyssey. In his reference he tells the reader about the HAL computer who uncannily perfectly expresses human emotion, as it shares its concern that its data banks and artificial brain is being shut down
Nicholas Carr in his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” explains that humans are being programed to process information like a machine, which is making us lose the ability to think for ourselves and losing our humanity. He uses a lot of bias sources in his writing about the “programing” that google is doing; which leads me to disagree with his assessment of google and what it is doing to us. My synopsis of his article is that google, or technology, is not making us programed to take in information at face value and losing our humanity because we are relying on it; but rather, google and technology is letting us embrace our humanity through our creation of technology by letting our individual thoughts be enhanced by giving us access to other
Nicholas Carr whom wrote “Is Google Making Us Stupid” explains the negative consequences of the increasing presence of the internet in society’s everyday lives, and his predictions of their future. He explains how the internet is so embedded in their everyday lives that it is hard for society to imagine what life would be like without it. I agree with some of his points, such as how the internet has changed the way society reads which is consequently changing the way they think. Society may read more in this day in age than ever before, but it is a different type of reading, the majority of the reading consists of quickly scanning short articles on the internet while often simultaneously juggling different tasks.
1. Nicholas Carr’s argument in his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” challenges Thompson’s argument which was that the internet is making people smarter by helping people improve their writing skills when they read other people’s work online. However, Carr believes with so much information available, the internet had changed our “mental habits” in a negative way. The internet has people using “ a form of skimming activity” which decreases how much people read to “no more than one or two pages of an article or book” (Carr 2) before they change to different site. Carr complicates Boyd’s view on how algorithms are filtering what people see on their screen and those who are not digitally literate would be clueless of this.
In his article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid? ” , Nicholas Carr talks about how the internet has affected the way most people process the information that they could found online. The title of the article is the most obvious clue for the argument that he is trying to make. He also points out how internet is our primary source to find the information that we are looking for, but the side effect is affecting our basic ability to read long pieces of information such as books. Google is a well-known website that allows to anyone instant access to kind of information, which can be really helpful if the user knows how to use and manipulate it.
In the article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid”, Nicholas Carr is saying that when the internet becomes our primary source of information, it negatively affects our reading ability and our attention span. Using Google and the internet dulls our brain’s experience in the learning process and makes it hard to focus on reading. Carr gives a researched account on how using the internet is supposed to be fast and rewarding to the user. He explains that we go on the internet because it is easier and less time consuming than using something like a book or a magazine. Carr exclaims that we now use the internet as our main source for information.
We Owe Our Diplomas to Google Have our brains become robots due to Google? From my own experience, when I need an answer to anything Google is my first place to go. In his article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr discusses, I agree with the points in his article. The ways people read and write today are affected by the Internet, as well as, the way people think, learn and absorb information.
He includes stories from organizations such as The New York Times and prominent figures who have had negative side effects including an ignorant attention span due to the Internet. Based on Carr’s essay, it can be said that we are a very distracted set of species. For example, scholars from the University of London conducted a study regarding the outcomes of research practices and their results showed that humans “typically read no more than one or two pages of an article or book before they would ‘bounce’ out to another site” (Carr 574). Based on this, it’s evident that we are, in fact, distracted and we “go online to avoid reading in a traditional sense” (574). Nicholas Carr's justified argument elucidates that media shapes the way we think and process information, which increases a high dependency on one source, a race with time, information distribution, and the inability to read printed
With a world full of technology, have humans become just walking vegetables? The symbolism is not referring to garden vegetables, but rather to the term referring to patients who are brain dead. Since the creation of the Internet, we have been able to access virtually any information at our fingertips, but at what cost? An article written by Nicholas Carr titled “Is Google Making Us Stupid” recognizes just that. Carr argues that humans have limited their ability in certain ways because of our complete and total access to everything that is on the internet.
What's google? According to the dictionary, it means a search for information about (someone or something) on the Internet using the search engine “Google.” Google now processes over 40,000 search queries every second on average, which translates to over 3.5 billion searches per day and 1.2 trillion searches per year worldwide (Internet Live Stats). In the article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid”, the main point that the author, Nicholas Carr, is trying to make is that as the internet becomes our primary source of information, it begins to affect our ability to read books and other long pieces. Even though this process may offer knowledge efficiency, it flattens our brain’s learning experience in the process.
I wonder what Mahatma Gandhi did to transform himself from a poor farmer to the leader of nonviolence resistance in the world. I wonder why billions of birds and animals migrate miles away in response to climate to survive. I wonder what Isaac Newton would have done if he had not taken his uncle’s advice of leaving agriculture and attending the University of Cambridge. I wonder about those who clicked on the buttons “like” and “share” and made a huge vibration in the world and changed the face of the history. In the world that we live in today, social media is a wonderful invention that changes everything around us.
The article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” is world wide, published article. It was written by “Nicholas Carr”, who has published various books and articles on a wide range of topics; including that of technology, business, and culture (Comley 609). However, with this article, Carr is bringing us to a whole new perspective on how the popular search engine, “Google”, is affecting our learning/intelligence. We, as individuals, are letting “Google” perform our own learning for us, creating a slow downfall in American intelligence. First off, Carr is an extremely credible author in that he is most known for being elected to the Encyclopedia Britannica’s editorial board of advisors in 2008 and was a graduate of Harvard University (Comley 609).
The Influence of Technology In the essay, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr argues that utilization of the internet has an adverse effect on our way of thinking and functioning in everyday life. Whether it be reading a newspaper, or scrolling through Facebook, internet media has forever stamped its name in our existence. Carr explains to us that the internet is a tool used every single day in today’s society, but also makes most of us complacent with the ease of having the world at our fingertips.