Is Google Making Us Stupid? Makes the New York Times

by Jul 28, 2008Uncategorized

The New York Times has devoted a four-web-page article to the question, “Online, R U Really Reading?”

Con

The Con side is represented by Dana Gioia of the National Endowment for the Arts, a onetime American poet laureate who has already made it into my mental quotation file twice:

  • “Poetry is the art of using words charged with their utmost meaning.”
  • “Aesthetic pleasure needs no justification, because a life without such pleasure is one not worth living.”

Gioia says of online reading: “What we are losing in this country and presumably around the world is the sustained, focused, linear attention developed by reading.” He adds, “I would believe people who tell me that the Internet develops reading if I did not see such a universal decline in reading ability and reading comprehension on virtually all tests.”

The Times supplies some pretty convincing circumstantial evidence via one 15-year-old whose reading tastes run toward online user-generated stories such as, “My absolutely, perfect normal life … ARE YOU CRAZY? NOT!”

Pro

But on the Pro side comes those “Web evangelists” who keep repeating, “At least they’re reading!” And one expert the Times quoted opted for a pro-diversity argument: “It takes a long time to read a 400-page book. In a tenth of the time [the Internet allows you to] cover a lot more of the topic from different points of view.”

I’m more sympathetic to the middle-ground view represented by one Zachary Sims, 18, who likes to read books but then discuss them with other people online. He also has a skill that I find people of generations previous to mine don’t have: he can find information quickly on the Internet.

Like any new information medium, the Internet carries benefits and pitfalls. The medium itself carries a message. We netizens should not be naive about that message.

Read More 

Roe at 41

Excellent article. Recent abortion cases have uncovered a weakness in the arguments of the Roe court: if the harms of unwanted pregnancy are largely those of future economic and personal hardship, not pregnancy itself, then the fathers of unborn children have nearly...

Dan Quayle Was Right

Potato may be spelled with an "e" or without one, but single parenting is not ideal for kids. Dan Quayle was right on the more important issue. So though I'm a little late (almost a year) noticing this article ("20 years later, it turns out Dan Quayle was right about...

Review: Wordsmithy: Hot Tips for the Writing Life

Wordsmithy: Hot Tips for the Writing Life by Douglas Wilson My rating: 4 of 5 stars I try to be scrupulous in my use of the five stars allotted to me by the gentle people of Goodreads. Five stars means "it was amazing." And I can't honestly say that about this book....

Leave a comment.

0 Comments