Nicholas Carr

Words: 673
Pages: 3

Nicholas Carr specifically explains how our use of the internet has caused us to become scatterbrained and unfocused in reading, and, indeed, people have become increasingly dependent on the internet and other search engines. In the article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr, he emphasizes how one’s excessive use of the internet is making individuals minds not as intellectual as they were before we began to thrive on technology. Carr shares how it has become a struggle for him to be immersed in deep reading. Bruce Friedman, a well known blogger, supports Carr’s statement by saying how both his reading and thought process have taken on a “staccato” quality. He cannot absorb short passages such as blogs of three or four paragraphs …show more content…
We use it constantly and grow more and more dependant on it each day. Before technology was such a vital part in our existence, we would do our research in books. Nowadays, Google and other search engines do all the work for us. We just type in a few keywords and find what we are looking for in a matter of seconds. By doing so, we become more dependent on the internet, skimming for the answers we need. In addition to constantly skimming texts, there is the problem of constant distractions. Carr wrote, “The more they use the Web, the more they have to fight to stay focused on long pieces of writing.” One could be reading an article for a research project, then find themselves taking an online quiz, such as, “Which Disney Character Are You?” We have lost the ability to stay completely focused in a …show more content…
In doing so, Google attracts more people to their ingenious search engine. According to Carr, the more links we click -- the more opportunities Google and other companies have to display more advertisements, which overall increases their money intake. So of course, Google will want to lure us in with its fancy new search engine and a multitude of information. All in all, Nicholas Carr profoundly explains how one’s use of the internet has caused us to become unfocused and dimwitted, and, indeed, Google has greatly benefitted the general public with all the information given to people, but they have also hurt them just as much. Convenience is key and that is what the Internet provides, yet we have become unattached to deep reading and horribly dependent on the