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A Battle of Wits On the Net's Effect On the Mind

An anonymous reader writes "There's a fascinating duel going on between two Harvard-associated authors, Steven Pinker and Nicholas Carr, on the topic of the Net's influence on the mind. In a New York Times op-ed, Pinker criticizes Carr's argument, as laid out in his new book The Shallows, that our use of the Net is encouraging us to become distracted, superficial thinkers. The Net and other digital technologies 'are the only things that will keep us smart,' writes Pinker. In a response on his blog, Carr tears apart Pinker's argument, claiming that Pinker's examples should actually make us even more worried about the possible 'ill effects' the Net is having on our minds. Carr concludes, 'We're training ourselves, through repetition, to be facile skimmers, scanners, and message-processors — important skills, to be sure — but, perpetually distracted and interrupted, we're not training ourselves in the quieter, more attentive modes of thought: contemplation, reflection, introspection, deep reading, and so forth.' Behind the debate is the deeper controversy over whether the human brain is fundamentally adaptable ('neuroplasticity') or genetically locked into patterns of behavior ('evolutionary psychology')."

2 of 218 comments (clear)

  1. I Have To Agree by sonicmerlin · · Score: 0, Troll

    That one dude who said people skim too much on the internet... what's his name? Yeah whatever. Anyways I think he has a point. Ever since I started reading slashdot I can't seem to focus on important details. Kind of like BP's execs and their oil rig's safety mechanisms.

  2. Re:I can see that by MrMr · · Score: 1, Troll

    I can skim it 100 times and will still not have understood it
    Don't worry, it's probably just a symptom of a very common condition known as 'stupidity', most of my co-workers suffer from it.