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Nicholas Carr'sIs Google Making Us Stupid?

Decent Essays

The internet has become a powerful part in today’s society. It has been reported that over 3 billion people use and interact with the internet. With this maximum use of technology, it is expected that some change will occur in the way people act or think. Nicholas Carr, an experienced writer on technology and its problems, discusses this change in his article “Is Google making us Stupid?” His discussion is well backed up, and I agree with his ideas that Google, or the internet in general, is changing the way we think. In the past when someone needed to research something, they would need to go find a book, newspaper or other such media that had what they wanted. This usually required they go to a library or bookstore and spend time wading through large readings to find the small bit of information they need. Today, all the material anyone could ever want is at the tip of their fingers in a second. Carr sums this idea up perfectly in his article saying, “Once I was a scuba diver in the sea of words. Now I zip along the surface like a guy on a jet ski”(737) and although it is very convenient and saves time it is, as Carr says, “a style that puts ‘efficiency’ and ‘immediacy’ above all else, may be weakening our capacity for the kind of deep reading that emerged when an earlier technology… made long and complex works of prose commonplace”(738). People are so caught up in the now and go that they tell themselves they don’t have the time to research something completely. This incomplete search could leave them without needed context or information and make their information wrong. Now, this may not be making people stupid, but it is making them lazy and often enough, incorrect. One such culprit of wrong information is social media. Most everyone has some form of social media. Whether it be Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram people have a way of communicating and getting news from all around the world. Unfortunately, this news is not always correct or trustworthy. Many people are not attuned to reading long articles or papers and just want the short story. Social media readily gives them shortened and condensed stories one after the other. Therefore, “traditional media has to adapt to the audience’s new

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