The Shallows Summary

Words: 543
Pages: 3

Nicholas Carr , the author of the Shallows believes that the internet is taking over the world and changing the Brain. Nicholas carr goes as far back as speaking about the first apple computer invented. He also mentions devices such as Wi-Fi-equipped DVD players that allow people to stream music, movies and YouTube videos through their entertainment systems. Although Carr believes the internet is changing our brains he also says, "I have to confess: It's cool,I'm not sure I could live without it." Yet Carr wants us to be aware of the fact of what we're losing in exchange for our Internet-fueled world. The Shallows is countering to those who accept a life in which the information is unlimited, easily accessed is split and loose from context. …show more content…
The author argues that soon all our brain is going to be able to do is click and flick, and our linear literary mind will disappear. Carr believes that the modern mind is like a fictional computer .Carr argues that the Internet physically "rewires" our brain to where we end up acting like computers. A large part of what it means to be human, he writes, is our capacity for "deep reading. Carr explains throughout the book that Deep reading, which requires "sustained, unbroken attention to a single, static object," has for ages allowed people to make "their own associations, draw their own inferences and analogies, fostered their own ideas." The Internet works against this, Carr explains it's like we enter a world that promotes hurried and distracted thinking, and superficial learning. Carr attempts to snap us out of the hypnosis that our phones, laptops and tablets have us under. He reveals why we're suddenly having a hard time focusing for a long period of time on any task, and why we continue to obsessively check our social media accounts and never seem to be able to get stuff done. Due to the fact that we've been abusing our brains. He wants us to value wisdom over knowledge, and to use new technology intelligently as a god medium or source. "We shouldn't allow the glories of technology to blind our inner watchdog to the possibility that we've numbed an essential part of our self," Carr