Carr, Nicholas. “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” The Atlantic. N.p., 2015. Web. 14 Nov. 2015.
"Is Google Making Us Stupid?" by Nicholas Carr makes the argument that the search engine giant and center of the internet’s access to knowledge could actually be having a negative impact on our minds. The article begins by talking about how the Internet can be a guide to infinite knowledge for the masses. In turn, he is theorizing that our construct of knowledge is becoming solely dependent on technology. He makes the assertion that it is becoming a crutch for our productivity and attention span “The more they use the Web, the more they have to fight to stay focused on long pieces of writing.” (Carr 2). According to Carr technology is slowly becoming the most important thing in our life. To the point where he says we are focusing more on becoming artificial than adapting the organic to live within the 1’s and 0’s. “We still await the long-term neurological and 7 psychological experiments that will provide a definitive picture of how Internet use affects cognition.” (Carr 2).
Nicholas Carr poses an interesting question in making me
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Haugen and Susan Musser explores the concepts of the theory of “the Singularity” (Haugen and Musser 1) by Ray Kurzweil. “What is the Singularity…the Singularity is a future period during which the pace of technological change will be so fast and far-reaching that human existence on this planet will be irreversibly altered.” (Haugen and Musser 1). The concept of Singularity is so profound and deep reaching in it’s entirety of a theory, but Kurzweil boils Singularity over the next half a century down to 3 stages, genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics. He demonstrates how human life, natural adaption, and evolution can coincide with technology and usher in the next wave of humanity possible only through the exponential growth and advancement of technology in significant stages. “Exponential growth starts out
Rhetorical Analysis In the article “Is Google Making us Stupid?”, author Nicholas Carr expresses his idea that the internet is taking over society and our thinking process. Google is affecting our abilities to read books, longer articles, and even older writings. Carr believes that we have become so accustomed to the ways of the internet, and we are relying on Google 's ability to sort through the details for us so we don 't have to, in order to get the information we find necessary more efficiently. He finds that this process has become almost too handy, and that it is corrupting us from becoming better educated.
In the article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr clearly states his thesis and the idea that not only is google changing the way we as humans think, read, and write, but all of technology is affecting us in our everyday lives. The internet sources such as Google are created to find information fast and easy for users. Google does all the searching and hard work of having to read through huge articles. We are humans have it easy now, we no longer have to do all the reading and digging around of endless articles and papers.
Therefore, I believe in Nicholas Carr’s intentions of his article and agree upon what he is stating. Nicholas Carr feels as if someone has rewired his brain. His brain isn’t thinking the way it use to think and he strongly feels it when he reads. He was able to read for hours through long stretches of prose but over the years that has changed. (Carr, 557) Nicholas’s concentration now starts to fade after reading just two or three pages.
In, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” (2008), Nicholas Carr maintains that the advent of the Internet produced a shallow generation of information consumers who lack the ability to deeply engage with a text and think critically about it. Carr supports his claim by drawing on numerous personal and historical anecdotes and one scientific study. The purpose of Carr’s article is to open dialogue about the potentially adverse effects the Internet could have human cognitive processes to allow individuals to begin to question the impact that the Internet is having on their lives. Carr establishes an informal, causal relationship with the audience. The audience of The Atlantic is generally well-educated, upper-middle class individuals who are likely approaching the article with a relaxed, non-critical lens (most likely embracing the article as a form of “think piece”).
Nicholas Carr wrote an article titled "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" and used quotes and factual evidence to support his thesis. His article was about the search engine Google and could be broadened by saying the internet is changing the way we think by saying we are becoming more and more illiterate and losing the brain functions to make connections as we read and write. I agree with Nicholas Carr in saying that Google, as well as the internet, is making us stupid. There are lots of real-life examples that prove the internet is making us stupid such as dulling our skills to read and write such as it dulls the mind by having the person reading articles to skim through making us lazy, destroys connections that the reader can make, and
Is Google Making Us Stupid?: Reading Response Author Nicholas Carr claims that the internet is making humans depend more heavily on short, summarized information online instead of reading books and long text, thus making us “stupid.” Carr uses anecdotes, typewriting “algorithms,” and shortened newspaper abstracts as evidence of humans’ deteriorating attention span (Carr 735-748). His explanation of other advancements in technology and the history of looking for shortcuts supports his argument in Google’s hand in making us lazier.
The internet, in short, is our everyday savior when in distress. Technology is a need in the 21st century. It is our main source of communication, socializing, learning and many others. However, according to Nicholas Carr’s “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, published in the July/August 2008 issue of the Atlantic, the internet is reprogramming his memory, and remapping his neural circuitry. Despite using logos intensely and multiple rhetorical approaches in convincing the reader of his point of view, Carr fails to make a logical, persuading argument for multiple reasons.
Carr introduced how he was felting with the technology “Over the past few years I’ve had an uncomfortable sense that someone, or something, has been tinkering with my brain…,” (313) expressing that he is not really comfortable on how his brain is chaining because of the technology. Furthermore, Carr continue expressing how he was able to read with no issue “Immersing myself in a book or a length article used to be easy (314). After that, expressed that now is getting harder for him to concentrate but he found the reason why he has this issue “I think I know what’s going on. For more than a decade now, I’ve been spending a lot of the time online, searching and surfing and sometimes adding to the great database of the internet” (314).
Carr decides to quote Richard Forman’s sentences from Forman’s recent essay. For example, Carr uses “As we are drained of our inner repertory of dense cultural inheritance, we risk turning into pancake people ---spread wide and thin as we connect with vast network of information accessed by the ere touch of a button” (qtd Forman 328) The essence of Carr’s use of this specific quote from Richard Forman’s essay is paint a negative mental image into his intend audience minds. The words and phrases like pancake people, drained, and risk all have negative cogitations. Carr also puts a lot of effort into getting his readers to feel and to persuade them into feeling the same way he does when stating: “I can feel it too. Over the past years I’ve had an uncomfortable sense that someone, or something has been tinkering with my brain, remapping the natural circuity, reprogramming my memory.
Technological advancements are capable of filling people with hope but fear as well. Nicholas Carr has written an intriguing article titled, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” which discusses how technology is changing the way we as humans think. Carr believes that technology is changing us negatively by shortening our attention span and preventing in depth thought and study. Through his article, Carr effectively demonstrates the manner in which technology is negatively impacting the way we think. One effective point Carr uses in his argument is fueled by historical evidence.
In the essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid” written by Nicholas Carr, argues the destructive nature of convenience that search engines like Google provide. As a result of this easy access to information, individuals tend to rely on these media rather than utilizing their intelligence to educate themselves. Carr claims that the Internet has shortened his attention span, led to a loss of focus and how “deep reading..has become a struggle” for him (Carr 576). The Net deteriorates one’s “capacity for concentration and contemplation” (Carr 577) because it destroys a person’s ability to have functional curiosity, connecting it back to Macdonald.
Shawntae Aikens Technology has a found a way into our lives where we use it everyday, and some have come to the point where they depend on it. People have become concerned that the Internet is becoming a distraction and has taken over our lives. The Internet, and social media has become very addicting our smartphones have given us the chance to have the internet and social media at our hands at all times. Nicholas Carr, a writer for the Atlantic Online, wrote the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Within his article he discusses his opinion on how the internet is something that is not helping us at all.
In today’s day and age technology is the backbone of society. The article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” states, “The internet contains the world’s best writing, images, and ideas.” this shows that the internet has the majority of the information people use to learn. Since the majority of our information is
In the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr argues that the internet is changing the way we think and work for the worst. Throughout the article, the author discusses how the use of the computer negatively affects our thought process. Carr touches on how his personal experiences of reading, surfing the web, scanning headlines and reading posts has affected his mind. The article explains how reading and spending time on the internet can affect reading ability.
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.