[Web4lib] "Is Google Making Us Stupid? What the Internet is doing
to our brains"
Chris Bourg
mchris at stanford.edu
Fri Jun 20 14:07:41 EDT 2008
I'm not about to assert a value system with no need of the skills of
"concentration and contemplation"; but I will cast a vote for balance.
When I am immersed in my regular work day of short reading,
decision-making, online communication, etc., I’m thankful that my brain
seems to respond quickly– allowing me to multi-task and work
efficiently. When I have work that requires deep concentration and
contemplation, I can create that opportunity (work from home?), and my
brain seems to respond.
Carr seems to be saying that getting his brain to adjust to
contemplative thinking is becoming harder; but I think it has always
been hard to create that kind of "space" for ourselves, and that blaming
"Google" or "the Net" is disingenuous.
I've written more here:
http://chrisbourg.wordpress.com/2008/06/18/googlestupid/
Best,
Chris
Elizabeth Winter wrote:
> 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
>
>
>
--
Chris Bourg
Head, Information Center
Stanford University Libraries and Academic Information Resources
http://infocenter.stanford.edu
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