Nicholas Carr states, “And what the Net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation. My mind now expects to take in information the way the Net distributes it: in a swiftly moving stream of particles.” (315) Carr’s article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid”, is about just what the title says, is the internet making us stupid. Before the internet, people had to go to libraries to read books and research could take anywhere from minutes to weeks. With internet access, research can take as little as two minutes. It is apparent Carr believes the internet is making people stupid. Carr clarifies how we think less profoundly and depend on brisk actualities, as opposed to utilizing basic reasoning and research. Additionally …show more content…
Individuals are losing fixation simpler than previously and rather than truely perusing material, they are skimming and rationally taking note of what has all the earmarks of being vital. On the web, which quite a bit of our opportunity is spent, we frequently skim to get the data we require then move onto the following thing. He clarifies the impacts the web has on its clients. Carr clarifies that the web has prepared out brains to skim and gather more data. There is so much accessible that no doubt if the mind was a PC that the cerebrum would in certainty require a bigger hard drive to store the greater part of the data. Organizations utilize the web to publicize and our consideration is battled for. As indicated by Carr this is done intentionally to enable sponsors to profit. By making our brains be diverted, when they do get the consideration they take a stab at, we will probably thusly purchase the item. We filter for data instead of sanity when such a large number of things are accessible to see. This implies cash for organizations. It is winding up so we can't help the way that our mind works. It is being prepared to think as it does with the web as well-known apparatus. Eventually, this manner of thinking makes it harder to focus even off of the PC. It is additionally extraordinary for organizations in light of the fact that a considerable measure of the time watchers don't