![]() ![]() To navigate it well - to discern truth and lies, to parse one's own emotional and reflexive responses, to summon the mental energy to pay attention to credibility and incentives and the small, almost indescribable cues that might indicate whether a piece of content is to be trusted - is very difficult. It is blasting in your face relentlessly. There is so much content on the internet, and so much of it is bad. I don't disagree, but what we're seeing now is that the content itself cannot be discounted as a potent force of mental disorder and relational discord. "n the long run, a medium's content matters less than the medium itself in influencing how we think and act," he said in his book. Carr focused on the medium over the message. ![]() Our habitual distraction is debilitating "addiction" is often neither too strong a word nor entirely metaphorical.īut it's not only that: The brokenness I'm describing is more than distraction. The attention span degradation Carr described has massively accelerated in the dozen years since his Atlantic story published, time in which social media and smartphone use has become ubiquitous. I'm not thinking the way I used to think." The internet, Carr said, "is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation." ![]() "My mind isn't going - so far as I can tell - but it's changing. "Over the past few years I've had an uncomfortable sense that someone, or something, has been tinkering with my brain, remapping the neural circuitry, reprogramming the memory," Carr wrote in an Atlantic article that inspired the book. Author Nicholas Carr was a Pulitzer finalist in 2011 for his exploration of the subject in The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains, which remains a landmark work on this phenomenon. The brain-breaking effects of the internet are by now well-documented. Their brains are broken, and that destruction is threatening to break our relationships, too. Two decades later, so many boomers that warned millennials to be careful on the internet seem to have forgotten all their own warnings. Porn could be literally anywhere! Don't believe everything you read, especially if it's not from a reputable source. Pedophiles could be literally anywhere! Don't go to sites you don't know. With the internet, there was an extra element of suspicion: Don't use your real name or post a picture of yourself. ![]()
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