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. Although the Internet has many benefits, it has negatively impacted our society in the way we spell, the way we read, our physical fitness, and our critical thinking skills.
People no longer have to think about how to spell a word. The auto-correct features in the technology we use automatically fix any errors made. In Carr’s article, he states
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Previous generations used encyclopedias or went to the library to gather information for schoolwork or any reports that needed written. Carr states “the faster we surf across the Web – the more links we click and pages we view – the more opportunities google and other companies gain to collect information about us and feed us advertisements” (Carr 325). Therefore, google is getting us to buy into its advertisements and spend money on products that we do not need. Carr also states, “it almost seems that they go online to avoid reading in the traditional sense” (Carr 317). With there being so many distractions on the Internet, people are not able to absorb the information they are reading. People are not reading they are skimming through the Internet. Although people are reading more today on the Internet, it is not a deep reading as if they were to read a book. Another negative effect the Internet has had on our society is by increasing …show more content…
With the unlimited Internet service, Netflix, and video games, kids no longer want to play outside to get the exercise they need. This lack of exercise is not only causing obesity, but also causing a deficiency in vitamin D, as well as lack of face – to – face socialization.
This generation is lazy in a way that they do not have to use their brains for problem solving. In my own experience. I am discouraged by the fact that my children do not have to actually think and figure things out on their own. They are able to type anything into google, and an answer appears within seconds.
People can google anything from the symptoms of a common cold to answers to homework problems, however, finding the answers on google does not make someone smart. In fact, people rely so much on Google today that they have stopped thinking for themselves and rely on Google to do the thinking for them. The main reasons Google is affecting people are, they are relying on Google to provide all the answers to any questions for them. People are not thinking for themselves, and spending more time on the internet, then getting the physical exercise they need. People should use their brains to the fullest, as they may be surprised with the knowledge they already have and the ability to solve problems.
Writer, Nicolas Carr, in his article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid”, expresses the search engine Google is effecting the human mind. Carr’s purpose is to covey his idea that the web changes the way humans think. He creates a pessimistic tone to his audience that spending a lot of time on the internet is bad for the mind. I don’t believe Carr made an effective argument on this article because of the tone he used, the references he provided, and how the article was laid out. Carr begins his article to the readers by acknowledging the web is messing with his brain and he is not thinking the way he used to.
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 “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” Nicholas Carr argues that Google is deteriorating the human mind. He mentions that people no longer want or even need to deeply read information and retain it because the particular information that they are looking for can just be Googled. In fact, he argues against this by stating that everything is not available on Google, and things that are available on Google are not necessarily true. Another con of this, he states, is that it is extremely difficult to read off of a computer screen. Carr argues that people’s brains are not programmed to read something in depth if it is off of a computer or phone screen.
He now spends more time online doing research or looking for entertainment. The vast expanse of information found on the internet comes at the expense of the author’s “capacity for concentration and contemplation” (315). After talking to others, Carr found that they also attribute their decrease in concentration to the internet. The author includes studies on internet habits that indicate that people do indeed jump from page to page, never really reading deeply into the content. Carr summarizes the findings of experts that demonstrate that the internet promotes a type of reading that does not
Vargas 1 Internet In the essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid?,” the author Nicholas Carr suggests the idea of the internet can make people concentrate less on reading two or three pages. Carr senses his attention span decreases whenever he tries to read an article. He believes it's because the internet is making us slothful. The internet can be significant to our life making it easier for people to find what they are looking for, but it's making us have trouble reading lengthy articles.
Is it really Googles fault or is America just lazy? In Nicolas Carr's article "Is Google Making Us Stupid?", he argues that people feel like they cannot read longer articles and books because we now have everything at our fingertips on Google. Is it right to assume that it really is Googles fault when there is not much factual evidence to back that up? The argument that Carr presents to us in his article is problematic in that he provides weak evidence and insufficient assumptions but includes many strong viewpoints from other recognized scholars. A piece of evidence Carr provides is that as a part of a five-year research program from the University College London, "scholars examined computer logs documenting the behavior of visitors...
Are readers to believe that the internet decreases one’s intelligence? Nicholas Carr, a prolific writer, argues that the more people use the web the harder it is to concentrate and stay focused. Is it fair to say the internet decreases people’s intelligence just because it can be more difficult to focus? Nicholas Carr’s argument in “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” could be problematic due to flawed evidence and assumptions and possibly failure to address different points of view. First of all, Carr does provide some flawed evidence.
The article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” written by Nicholas Carr, arguing that Google’s easy search and result technique is causing its users to lose their ability to stay focused while reading and overall change their brains negatively. Nicholas Carr is a blog and essay writer who enjoys writing about technology and its effect on society. The publisher of this article is “The Atlantic” magazine, who are part of the market that competes with google, the source in question. Nicholas Carr when writing “Is Google Making Us Stupid” used experiences of other bloggers and semi-related historical events to argue that methods of documenting information actually have a negative effect on how we absorb and produce information. Carr begins with explaining his experience and the belief that the internet caused
The net is such an excellent resource for almost everything we need; whenever we have a research paper due, want to see pictures of family members, or are simply bored, the net supplies. However, Carr states that such easy accessibility of information comes with a price, and that the Internet is slowly taking away our ability to be profound and replacing it with swift superficial thinking (Carr 801). My generation, myself included, knows nothing about opening a book and immersing our minds in the literature. On the contrary, we know everything about social networking and jumping from hyperlink to hyperlink. Our focus has been reduced to a picture with a caption and a 140 letter Twitter post.
A Response To Nicholas Carr: is Google Making Us Stupid? Google a powerhouse in today’s rapidly expanding technological society. My dad uses Google to access information. You use Google to access information.
The more they use this method, the more they find it a struggle to stay focused on the task at hand. Scott Karp, an online blogger who writes about media, said that he has stopped reading books all together. Karp states: “What if I do all my reading on the web not so much because the way I read has changed, but because the way I think has changed” (Carr 68). The internet seems to be affecting the ability for people to be able to
Humans continue to find a ways to make things easier for themselves because it is natural to want less work to do. The Internet and search engines blew up in popularity because of their efficiency. Despite their convenience, several people believe that technology and the Internet have negative effects on people. Nicholas Carr, for example, argues that the Internet can have damaging consequences to one’s brain in his essay,“Is Google Making Us Stupid?”.
Nicholas Carr examines the relationship between not only the way we read but also the way we think and our increasing use of the Internet in his article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”. Carr believes that the use of the Internet has hindered our ability to concentrate and examine literature. Carr’s article contains a significant amount of anecdotal evidence, as well as some scientific research, which he includes in an attempt to support his stance; however, in my assessment the evidence Carr presents is ineffective in supporting his assertions. I will examine the flaws within Carr’s article, as well as the evidence utilized by Carr and evaluate the validity of his argument. Additionally, I will discuss research findings relevant to the subject matter to support my viewpoint that the Internet does not threaten our ability to narrow our focus and delve into a piece of literature.
The internet has a lot of control on the way we think, while some are positive and some are negative. In “Is Google Making Us Stupid,” Nicholas Carr talks about how the internet shapes the way we read. The purpose of “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr is to bring light to how the internet is changing our brain’s behavior and function. He does this by using anecdotes, scientific studies, and historical evidence throughout his article.
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.