In the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr he clearly states, “I can feel it, too. Over the past few years I’ve had an uncomfortable sense that someone, or something, has been tinkering with my brain, remapping the neural circuitry, reprogramming the memory” (Carr). This quote suggests that the author feels the effects of the Internet just as everyone else has. Most people would agree that use of the Internet is a daily task yet few can deal with life without the Internet. The Net has made life easier but as Carr suggest it is my contention that it is changing the way people think thus making us “stupid”. The Internet at its inception was a grand experiment with vast amounts of information available to a select few. As the …show more content…
If deep reading is no longer performed, then our brains are rewired to not deep think. This clearly demonstrates that the use on the Net is in effect making us less intelligent. Reading a physical book requires patience and concentration. When browsing the Internet there is not much concentration or deep thinking required. These skills become dormant and cannot be reawakened. This process is how our brain prunes itself of neurons. The neuroplasticity of the brain shrinks and the pruning weakens when the neurons are not used. Just as the adage says, “use it or lose …show more content…
The science behind this claim has yet to be examined. The effects are seen in everyday life however. Newspapers and magazines now provide brief synopses of the article written presenting the information in a condensed format because deep reading is no longer possible. No longer reading and examining the ideas and theory behind a subject but just getting a microwave lesson. Everyone is affected by this change in thinking but no one is standing up to evaluate the cost. The scientific research is in its infancy but the effects are far reaching. From this research a few things have come to light. The Internet has changed the way that people think. The Internet has also made a generation of technological whiz kids lacking in deep thinking skills as a whole. To the question that was asked the answer is an affirmative and resounding