Is Google Making Us Backfire Nicholas Carr Analysis

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What do you think of when you hear the word Internet? Most people will think of Google, Facebook, or even their favorite blog, but what if we started thinking about how we use the Internet and how it affects our everyday lives? Nicholas Carr is an author of many books and articles about technology and culture. In the summer of 2008, on the 10th anniversary of Google, Carr wrote an article that was published in the Atlantic and is titled Is Google Making Us Stupid. Two years later, Joe Keohane wrote an article titled How Facts Backfire. Keohane is a writer in New York and he is a senior editor for Esquire Digital. Both Carr and Keohane are professional writers, and their articles agree with each other, therefore they go hand and hand. While Carr and Keohane both agree that the way we think is changing, Carr describes what is happening while we read our information, whereas, Keohane describes what happens after we receive the information. …show more content…

But that is quite the contrary. For instance, misinformation is reinforced when we are given facts that go against our beliefs, making us feel threatened and deepen our beliefs rather than accepting that we are wrong. This is what he refers to as “backfire.” Keohane also states that by deepening our beliefs, we deepen our opinions which can harm the facts. In addition, when given information, we will approve of the information that supports our opinions and ignore the information that will prove we are wrong. Nevertheless, the only way to possibly get people to change their mind is to “hit them ‘between the eyes’” with purely true facts. Keohane suggests that we only have two choices to solve the problem of our thinking: either shaming the one who is spreading the misinformation, or stopping the misinformation where it starts, at its

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