Business Standard
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
drived banner
drived banner
  Advanced Search
RSS
Content Guide
Follow us on  
||||||Life & Leisure||| 
 Section Home | People | Features | Enterprise | Columnists | Gadgets & Gizmos | Travel | How to Spend It | Book Review | Leisure & Sports
Home > Life & Leisure
 

It's the Net, stupid
Rrishi Raote / New Delhi Jul 24, 2010, 00:19 IST

Reading article after article online at breakneck speed to complete this column, I was almost set to laughing by the irony: here I was, trying to summarise what people are saying about the effect of Internet and the asteroid-field of small doses of information with which we are surrounded, not to say bombarded, and I was scarcely getting the time to assimilate what I was seeing. How could I write about the danger to ‘deep reading’ without having the time to do ‘deep thinking’? Amusement turned to worry as opinion, in the articles I was (let’s be truthful) skim-reading, turned to fact — courtesy an essay by Nicholas Carr in the June issue of Wired.com magazine.

Carr reports that a recent psychiatry experiment at a California university suggests that experienced web surfers show markedly different patterns of brain activity than people who spend very little time online. “Brain activity of the experienced surfers was far more extensive than that of the newbies,” while surfing, Carr writes, “particularly in areas of the prefrontal cortex associated with problem-solving and decisionmaking.” Well, good, one might think, except that it turns out the net result (sorry about the pun) of even a few hours’ exposure to the Internet was an actual reshaping of the brain’s neural pathways.

 
 
 
Related Stories
News Now
-The India in Indo-China
-The buttered toast war
-Lost on the river
-Mysterious moves
-Yackety yuck
-Profiting from death
Of course, Carr, who writes often on technology and culture, goes on to note that people like information — indeed, this may be an evolutionary advantage. For the hunting human, real-time information is useful; and for the human social animal, an absence of information leaves it isolated.

Yet Carr concludes that trading focus for quantities of information is not wise: “We’re exercising the neural circuits devoted to skimming and multitasking while ignoring those used for reading and thinking deeply.” Rather than skimming being a means to an end, it is becoming the end in itself. He closes his article with a historical analogy: “What we’re experiencing is, in a metaphorical sense, a reversal of the early trajectory of civilization: We are evolving from cultivators of personal knowledge into hunters and gatherers in the electronic data forest.”

I focus on Carr so much, rather than the many others who have weighed in on this debate (in its current avatar; technology-versus-tradition is a very old contest) since the age of personal computing began in the 1980s, because Carr has written so extensively about it. The last time this same debate was kickstarted, it was again by Carr, via an essay in the Atlantic of July/August 2008 titled “Is Google Making Us Stupid? What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains”. This year he has a whole book out on the subject. It’s called The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains (W W Norton), and in it Carr rehearses his argument on a greater scale. He brings in history, cultural criticism and even neuroscience.

Leading the resistance, however, is professor of English and linguistics Dennis Baron, whose A Better Pencil: Readers, Writers, and the Digital Revolution (OUP) was published late last year. To Baron, the ideas of Carr are wrong and uninformed. At every moment of technological advance in communication, Baron and his fellows say, there is resistance from the tradition-minded. He starts with the development of writing. Students with their heads full of information achieved without a teacher would be full not of wisdom but the conceit of wisdom, worried Socrates. He was partly right, yet very wrong. Much the same applies to the shift from handwriting to printing, from page to screen, and so forth.

Now the great thing about this debate is that it underlies so much else — including our angst about ‘dumbing down’, fears of globalisation and for the future of literature, our responsibility to our children, concern over how social networking changes relationships... Carr, Baron and others are discussing the very foundation of our world: how we deal with information. However, they do it in writing, often very eloquent writing, and this is both a pleasure and a lesson for restless readers like this one.

(rrishi.raote@bsmail.in)  

New Ipad Application :Business Standard's all new IPad App
Click here to download for free
Arrow Other Stories     
- Markets off day's low
- Soyabean slips on global cues
- Pepper sheds 0.6% on profit-booking
- Dell Q1 net profit down nearly 33% at $635 mn
- Rupee breaches 56/dollar, despite RBI action
  Read Business news in 
- Benefits Upto Rs. 2.36 Lakhs on the Fully Loaded TJet Petrol.
- Journey on, We are by Your Side. Click here to know more
- 
- Benefits Upto Rs. 2.36 Lakhs on the Fully Loaded TJet Petrol.
- The Best Seller is Also the No. 1 in Mileage. Click here
- Watch The Film Here. Click here to know more..
- Leader in Passenger Car & Automobile Tyres. Click here
- 1 billion in saving for Unilever without any tangles.
- Learn How One City is Running on FOOD SCRAPS.
- One Partnership Endless Possibilities. Click here to know more
- Helping doctors detect diseases earlier, saving costs & extending lives.
- 36 Lakhs can get you a pool of Luxuries. Click here
- Which is the best plan for your daughter
- Check out the TRUE COLOURS of your Stocks, Now for FREE!
- One of the leading business schools in the world.Know More
Sorry, comments to this story are closed
Latest Messages
Table for Two
  Now available at Special price
  Rs.280/- Only

  Buy Now
BS POLL
UPA 2 has completed three years. How do you rate its performance?  Read the story
  Good
  Average
  Bad
Submit
Most Popular
Read
E-Mailed
Commented
   
- RCom goes all out to show off Google partnership
- Vodafone disconnects India IPO plan for now
- FII gains evaporate as dollar turns too hot for rupee
- Rupee hits new record low, near key 56-level
- Falling rupee spells fresh trouble for airlines
 
 More  
New Ipad Application
 Business Standard's all new IPad  App
 Click here to download for free
  Hot Searches  
 
Creamy layer |  Air India |  GAAR |  DRDO  |  Black Widow |  Satyamev Jayate |  Akshaya Tritiya |  Aamir Khan |  IPL |  IVRCL |  Ertiga |  Sarfaesi Act |  Vodafone |  Imagine TV |  Transfer pricing |  Rupee |  Kingfisher Airlines |  Silver |  Provident Fund |  income tax refund |  Budget 2012 |  iPhone |  Reliance Industries |  SEBI |  BSNL |  BSE |  NSE |  Mukesh Ambani |  Anil Ambani |  Infosys |  Pranab Mukherjee |  Sonia Gandhi |  Rahul Gandhi |  New Pension Scheme |  Reliance |  RBI |  GDP |  Gold |  Ratan Tata |  ICICI |  B-School |  Sensex |  Tax calculator |  Home Loan |  Personal Finance |  inflation |  oil prices |  Barack Obama |   
 
  Member Area Write to the Editor RSS Archives Advanced Search
  Subscribe to BS print product BS e-paper Newsletter Portfolio Tracker
  BS Products BS Hindi BS Motoring BS Books
Home | Markets & Investing | Companies & Industry | Banking & Finance | Economy & Policy | Opinion
Life & Leisure | Management & Marketing | Tech World | General News
About Us | Partner With Us | Code of Conduct | Careers | Advertise with us| Terms & Conditions | Disclaimer | Contact Us