Never before have we lived in a time where information was so freely available. If I want to read my favorite author’s latest chapter, buy a new pair of headphones, or watch a cute cat video, the internet has it all. ? In Nicholas Carr’s “Is Google Making Us Stupid” he presents on how the internet is…
Nicholas Carr, a Harvard graduate writes this article, "Is Google Making Us Stupid," to underline a potential danger the evolution of the net poses to Americans. The article published in The Atlantic, one of the most respected literary magazines based out of DC, seeks to raise caution to the American people as to our reliance on "instant" information, which may be reducing our thinking capabilities, leading to consequences such as being "drained of our 'inner repertory of dense cultural inheritance.' " While Carr's argument lies entrenched in the potential loss of thought of the human mind, he does admit that his argument might be just one of "worry." However, his extensive research might prove otherwise.…
An Analysis of Carr’s “Is Google Making Us Stupid” In the last 30 years, a wave of technological innovation has swept over the Earth, blanketing our cultures with Cell Phones, Microwaves, and the peculiar creation labeled simply, “The Internet”. Emerging to the public in the 1990’s, the Internet is a vast collection of databases stored all around the world, allowing anyone with a computer and access to the internet to view virtually anything you might want to learn about. However, even in its early age, the Internet displayed curious properties, as popular tech-cartoonist Scott Adams states,” In 1993, there were only a handful of Web sites you could access, such as the Smithsonian’s exhibit of gems. These pages were slow to load and crashed…
In the article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” published in 2008 by Atlantic Media Company, allows individuals to perceive differently about the Internet. The author, Nicholas Carr, explains that once he was granted access to the web, his concentration and contemplation is degrading. He mentions that his friends and acquaintances are also having similar experiences and that the anecdotes and experiments for helping this disease rarely prove as much. In my opinion, I would have to agree on his stance because I also believe that the Internet has weakened our mind and potential for greatness. Carr has experienced the effects of searching and surfing online for more than a decade, and his deep reading becomes a struggle.…
“Is Google Making Us Stupid” It has become very common in the world to use the Internet every single day of our life. In the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid” Nicholas Carr tackles the issues that he notices in himself, starting with how he no longer has the ability and it has become increasingly difficult to simply read a lengthy scholarly article. Carr states “My mind would get caught up in the narrative or the turns of the argument, and I’d spend hours strolling through long stretches of prose” (314). Carr is explaining to us that in his earlier years of life, he would not have this issue that he used to enjoy reading long educational articles. But as the years have gone by, (around a decade), Carr tells us that all the hyperlinks that instantly bring you to that page where the author got his/her information for the article do not simply tell you where to find the information, they propel you to that information in an instant.…
Technology is changing our lives and whether we like it or not we find ourselves having to go along with it. Writers, readers, composers, researchers and so on need to find a way to adapt to the change that comes with what we call “The Technology Era”. As always there will be two sides to any change; the one that will agree with it and open their arms to it, and a second that will forever talk about how great times used to be when things were done the only way they know to do things because they do not like change or cannot adapt to new. Nicholas Carr (2008) states “I’m not thinking the way I used to think. I can feel it most strongly when I’m reading.…
The current debate that is sweeping the nation is that technology is changing the way we think and process information. We find ourselves fidgety and unable to focus on long paragraphs of reading causing us to skim because our brains cannot absorb that much information at a time. The main problem in today’s society is that we are depending on technology to give us the answer to any and every question we have in an instant. Most of the time we just open google, type in what we want to know and out shoots the answer. Nicholas Carr’s article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, published by The Atlantic, is just one of the articles that explain the effects that technology has on our way of thinking.…
Yuchin is the unrealistic character of The Bane of the Internet, a short story written by Ha Jin. This story has an almost humorous tone as two sisters, one who lives in China and the other in New York, communicate with each other. This character and her older sister wrote and sent each other letters via the postal service as their main means of communication until they discovered email. The name of the older sister is unknown but this story is told through her point of view. The narrator is the protagonist of the story and her sister is the antagonist.…
In the article “How Google, Wikipedia Have Changed Our Lives-For Better and Worse”. Jennifer Woodard Maderazo Introduces How the internet has changed the learning aspect of students in school. It Inflicts how back then when modern technology wasn’t prevalent, students had to use books to research the questions they worked on. As of now in current times more students tend to use the internet as a more useful source than going to a library and taking the time to source/research the information. Also it Generalizes how when students began studying back then in the early ages students were more dedicated to learning about the class and relying on classroom experience.…
The author uses her knowledge of the topic to further her own argument against it, and to ultimately scare her readers. Whether they are the older generations who did not grow up with the internet, or the younger generations that are unaware of the effects of their browsing history. Andrews knows her target audience and how to tailor her words to them, similar to news agencies choosing what to report to each user based on their history. This “weblining” that she discusses in her essay, she is guilty of herself (334). She rattles off buzzwords that, to a layperson, sound quite intimidating.…
“The Only Way to Keep the Internet Free” Author, Besty McCaughey’s article, “The Only Way to Keep the Internet Free,” illustrates Hilary Clinton’s ideas with her internet policies and what ICANN proposes. ICANN stands for Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. ICANN will basically have full control and power over the internet, meaning that they may grant or deny any web addresses they please. Obama, as well as Hilary, of course, supports this policy and believes that it will “embolden authorization regimes.…
The brain has the ability to reprogram itself on the fly, altering the way it functions" (Carr 60). While reading Nicholas Carr 's article "Is Google Making Us Stupid? What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains", one may feel they have taken a seat on the most intellectual and fascinating roller coaster. In the 2008 article published in the Atlantic, Carr effectively explains not only what an obsessive amount of surfing the web is progressively doing to our lives but in our lives. He does an exceptional job at delivering his findings to the audience without overly complicating it.…
Our sources for information can range from books, novels, articles, encyclopedias, and of course the Internet. The Internet is equipped with a multitude of knowledge from word definitions, articles on Greek mythology, biochemistry notes from different parts of the United States, and so much more. All of this information can be found with a click of button and results come pouring in, in the millions. Because we encounter all of these different ideas and articles on the Web, how does it affect us in how we think? With the help of novelists, neuroscientists, psychologists, and writers we will see how much, or how non-existent, the Internet affects the way we think and our physical brain.…
We live in a digital world; it is in all parts of life. Technology today has everything shaped into the speediest and most advantageous forms possible to make individuals lives greater and more importantly, easier. The innovations and growth that have been made through recent years are astounding when compared to where the world was only a couple of years to ten years prior. With the web and everything connected to it, messaging, video calls, educational programs and shopping- the potential outcomes for technology later on are practically innumerable. With growing technology, there are risks and benefits preserving an online existence.…
In his article entitled “Internet Access Is Not a Human Right” published on the website of The New York Times on 4 January 2012, Vincent G. Cerf, a vice president and chief Internet evangelist for Google, presents his perspective on a controversial issue regarding access to the Internet. He argues that access to the Internet should not be accepted as a human right, “it’s just a tool to achieve those rights.” According to Internet World Stats (2014), over a third of the world’s population are accessing the Internet as a part of their everyday life. This proves that the Internet plays numerous significant roles in society. It makes our lives easier and more convenient than in the past, by providing information, education, communication, business, and freedom of expression.…