[Web4lib] "Is Google Making Us Stupid? What the Internet is doing to our brains"

Elizabeth Winter elizabeth.winter at library.gatech.edu
Fri Jun 20 13:40:11 EDT 2008


Carr may be a little ambitious in what he's trying to do in the space of 5 pages (for those who still print things out), and he loses a little credibility by referring to "the Net," but he makes a number of good observations--things I've noticed in my own habits.  

"Chipping away at my capacity for concentration and contemplation" certainly resonates.  The process of reading this article is illustrative: I read about 25% of it, printed it out, went to get lunch, picked it back up, started reading again, and couldn't finish the article without looking back at my computer screen at least three times to check for new emails.

I'd be interested to hear if others think a value system exists where one has no need for the skills of "concentration and contemplation" (I'm not being snarky...I'm genuinely interested in this question).

Best,
Elizabeth


-- 
Elizabeth L. Winter
Electronic Resources Coordinator
Collection Acquisitions & Management
Library and Information Center
Georgia Institute of Technology
email: elizabeth.winter at library.gatech.edu
phone: 404.385.0593
fax: 404.894.1723

----- Original Message -----
From: "K.G. Schneider" <kgs at bluehighways.com>
To: web4lib at webjunction.org
Sent: Friday, June 20, 2008 10:53:42 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Re: [Web4lib] "Is Google Making Us Stupid? What the Internet is doing to our brains"


On Fri, 20 Jun 2008 10:30:42 -0400, "Ross Singer"
<rossfsinger at gmail.com> said:
> The philosophy of "your values don't match my values so they must mean
> you are stupid and I am right" is a particularly arrogant one, in my
> mind.
> 
> -Ross.

Ross, I agree with that statement but disagree that it applies to Carr.
He has the humility to talk about what he believes Google is doing *to
him* as well as to others (and for that matter, phrase it as a
question). When Carr writes, "I’m not thinking the way I used to think,"
I identify -- in part because he isn't standing on a mountaintop
sneering at the scatterbrained masses. I blogged about this today...
after pushing myself to read for a couple of hours, even though the
laptop beckoned from the next room. 

I don't agree with everything Carr says, but I agree with the way he
says it. 

K.G. Schneider
kgs at freerangelibrarian.com


_______________________________________________
Web4lib mailing list
Web4lib at webjunction.org
http://lists.webjunction.org/web4lib/






More information about the Web4lib mailing list