I think weâre all increasingly aware of what type of world weâre living in now, right? Information is literally at our fingertips, more accessible than itâs ever been and weâre becoming increasingly reliant upon it. But what does that actually mean? Is it a good thing or a bad thing that weâre able to access obscure facts and reference articles whenever we need to? The debate rages on, probably as we speak (err, read) and as with any debate, there are two extremes. Arenât there always?
The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains by Nicholas Carr addresses part of this by examining the culture of the Internet, how itâs already impacted our lives and how it continues to do so. That term âinstant gratificationâ gets tossed around a lot these days and I canât pretend Iâm not one of those people who gets really frustrated if their smart phone hasnât pulled up the website they want after a few seconds… probably because Iâm trying to prove my very valid point to someone whoâs being a tool and I NEED TO PROVE THEYâRE WRONG — ahem. But still! My PHONE is pulling up a website, my PHONE is always in my pocket and therefore the Internet is always at my fingertips. (AT&T willing anyway… which isnât so often, as it turns out.)
The point is! Does greater access to information actually increase our knowledge? Thatâs debatable. Simply having facts and  being able to regurgitate data is not the same thing as wisdom, is it? Multitasking doesnât mean weâre more complex, it means weâre more scattered, doesnât it? …does it?
Carr tackles these notions expertly with a little bit of humorous anecdote and a plethora of scientific fact to back up his feeling on the subject of our ever increasing dependency on the Internet. The first chapter of this book was just… depressing, to me, as a voracious reader. Iâve always been the kind of person who enjoys curling up on the sofa with a good book, getting lost in some fantastical world or immersed in a foreign culture on my own time.
After digesting tales from people like English majors and impressively decorated scholars who are bemoaning that theyâve lost the ability to sit down and enjoy a lengthy piece of literature, because their attention was too scattered and their ability to concentrate on a single work lost, I was ready to toss this book out the window and pretend it never existed. âLALALALA THIS ISNâT HAPPENING! SMART PEOPLE DONâT FEEL THIS WAY! LALALA!â Ugh, itâs utterly depressing.
But I pressed on, even though I didnât want to, and finished the book. Luckily, Iâm glad I did!
Carr provides a great bank of detailed information here, citing studies and articles on topics like memory, brain plasticity and cognitive science. He does a great job of organizing all of his information and opinion rationally and effectively. I found myself pausing to consider what he was describing, once or twice, and hoping fervently that heâs wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wronnggggggg about the way the world is turning out, but knowing better. One can only hope.
The book is distinctly pessimistic though. I didnât come away with a warm, fuzzy feeling about the direction of our society and cultural knowledge, but I also realize that Carr is not totally flawed in the way heâs waxinâ philosophic about it either. And that kind of sucks.
Basically, The Shallows is a good read. Itâs meant to coerce you into a bit of deep thought and if you can tear yourself away from a screen for a few hours, youâll probably be glad that you did. Maybe. As depressing as I found it, Iâm still glad I gave it a shot and if you decide to, Iâd love to hear your thoughts on the subject.
So happy reading, literary nerdlings! As always, feel free to leave your questions, comments or words of wisdom right here orrrr on Twitter!
Image: Nicholas Carr
I haven’t read this book so I can’t be certain of the line of reasoning but A) people are reading more than ever because of the Internet and B) I am just as likely to read a long-form article on the Internet as I am in a magazine, if the article is indeed well-written and interesting. These nay-sayers (including Carr) should write for Canada’s Maclean’s magazine, which also loves to expound on the total emotional and intellectual emptiness of Gen Y. Beware the apocalypse!
You had me at “brain plasticity!”
Thank you for the review. You gave enough detail to convince me this book is genuinely nerdy enough to be worth checking into. Also, I appreciate knowing in advance that I will have to “be in a good place” before I start, so as to be strong enough to handle the knowledge that comes my way!
I do love me some book-larnin’!
Sounds like a good read, especially to an internet-addicted Internet-doomsdayer like me. I’m sure when I read it I’ll find it impossible to forget that it was the Internet that told me about it in the first place.
One quote makes this all better. “Being smart is NOT knowing everything, it’s knowing who to ask or where to look”