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The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains Updated Edition
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New York Times bestseller • Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize
"This is a book to shake up the world." ―Ann Patchett
- ISBN-100393357821
- ISBN-13978-0393357820
- EditionUpdated
- PublisherW. W. Norton & Company
- Publication dateMarch 3, 2020
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.8 x 8.3 inches
- Print length320 pages
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Customers find the book's content heavy researched, imaginative, and valuable. They also describe the reading experience as great and worth the time. Opinions are mixed on readability, depth, and entertainment value. Some find the writing clear and brevity, while others say it's not easy to read. Readers also disagree on the content's length and depth, with some finding it very long and others saying it'll be a very boring read.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book's content highly researched, providing a much greater depth of detail for the brain science research. They also describe it as a short but informative, thought-provoking book that's rich with historical anecdotes and scientific surveys and evidence. Readers also mention that the book is readable, important, reflective, and imaginative. They say it's a sophisticated tool that allows them to verify and validate sources and arguments.
"...of printed pages, they became more contemplative, reflective, and imaginative. “..." Read more
"...Second, the book is a great resource/compendium of scientific and philosophical discussions about the development of our mental tools from books to..." Read more
"...the results of medical studies on both animals and people, is very well explained and gives a scientific basis for how our brains remember..." Read more
"...The great service this book does is that it assembles all the information and evidence for the harm being done to our brains by common digital..." Read more
Customers find the book a great and valuable read, with great prose that hooks them. They also say the Kindle brings convenience to long form reading without terribly derailing their focus. Readers also mention that the book provides non-stop entertainment.
"...and in particular changing our ways of thinking, this is a helpful and interesting read...." Read more
"...Second, the book is a great resource/compendium of scientific and philosophical discussions about the development of our mental tools from books to..." Read more
"In short, the book is good . . . the reality of the shallows is not so good...." Read more
"...Well worth the read." Read more
Customers are mixed about the readability. Some mention that the book is very readable, well written, and easy to access information. However, others say that it's not an easy read, not compelling, and simplistic.
"...There were social networks, e-mails, games and easy-to-access information that he was starting to use...." Read more
"...The author is on a really good roll, writing great prose and hooking the reader until the very last part of the book...." Read more
"...the two books I mentioned above, I found Carr's book to be somewhat simplistic, though it does touch upon the history of written and oral..." Read more
"...reservations I've raised here, Nick Carr's "The Shallows" is beautifully written and is my early favorite for the most important info-tech book of..." Read more
Customers find the book a quick read that provides consistent, linear, and measurable time.
"...You can click on hyperlinks, skim pages, and look up information quickly. Going on Google is very popular today, especially for students...." Read more
"...Using the internet makes it quick and easy to find fast answers to pressing questions and everyday inquiries...." Read more
"...Instead of consisting of variable epicycles within cycles, time became consistent, linear, and measurable...." Read more
"...for those who wish to read something in their spare time, as it is a quick read, and the information is very relevant to our times." Read more
Customers find the premise of the book promising. They say it's part storytelling, part research, and findings. They also say the last two chapters are the most powerful.
"...The book begins with a good premise. Technology itself has changed the very nature of how we think - mostly to the negative...." Read more
"...and how it affects human mind, this was an alright introduction with okey enthusiasm that Nicholas carries on his writing despite the context being..." Read more
"...The Shallows is a heavily researched book which is part storytelling, part research & findings, and part philosophy...." Read more
"...the effect it has had on society - but this book is a very good starting point...." Read more
Customers find the book insightful and well written. They also say the author is brilliant.
"...The Internet IS a tool. Arguably the most seductive, transformative, and sophisticated tool our species has yet encountered...." Read more
"...a way that I (someone who is doing research in this field) think is quite deft and responsible...." Read more
"...Nicholas Carr's new book is an intriguing look at the Internet's effect on our thought processes - and how it might actually alter the way our..." Read more
"...Carr writes in a straightforward, lucid style. No special knowledge of brain function is required to derive full benefit from this fascinating book...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the entertainment value of the book. Some find it entertaining and thought provoking, while others say it's boring, repetitive, and lacks substance.
"...Unfortunately, the book became monotonous and drone after about one third of the book. Maybe it was due to my own lack of attention span...." Read more
"...sad to think that I am so in love with such a thing, but it is extremely addictive. Carr states that the Internet has changed the way we think...." Read more
"...While necessary for framing his argument, I felt as if these initial chapters were boring (which may prove to drive his point even further.)..." Read more
"...Only the later chapters showed the age of the book (2010) and were less compelling." Read more
Customers are mixed about the content depth. Some mention that there's plenty of depth in The Shallows, an intelligent, well-developed overview of how the internet works. They also say the characterizations of shallow behavior are accurate and things that the reader will recognize. However, others say that it's a very long essay, too dense for the topic, and that the article content is tortuously expanded into a book that seems to be a decade old.
"...read a long article or a book, I can't get into it and I feel restless after 300 words. I thought it was aging. It's not...." Read more
"...I found The Shallows most insightful. Only two criticisms would I register...." Read more
"...As to writing style, I find that the author tends to be a bit long-winded, and strays off focus at times...." Read more
"...Although the book is not very long, it feels much, much longer because of the intense history lesson the author gives us and the fact that it's just..." Read more
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‘Intellectual vibrations’?
‘’In the quiet spaces opened up by the prolonged, undistracted reading of a book, people made their own associations, drew their own inferences and analogies, fostered their own ideas. They thought deeply as they read deeply.’’ (62)
This was primarily a religious, essentially Biblical devotion. How experienced?
“Even the earliest silent readers recognized the striking change in their consciousness that took place as they immersed themselves in the pages of a book. The medieval bishop Isaac of Syria described how, whenever he read to himself,’’
Of course, these were almost overwhelmingly reading religious books, usually the Bible or Greek philosophers. Deep reading. . .
“as in a dream, I enter a state when my sense and thoughts are concentrated. Then, when with prolonging of this silence the turmoil of memories is stilled in my heart, ceaseless waves of joy are sent me by inner thoughts, beyond expectation suddenly arising to delight my heart.”
Wow! Who does this? How significant?
“Reading a book was a meditative act, but it didn’t involve a clearing of the mind. It involved a filling, or replenishing, of the mind. Readers disengaged their attention from the outward flow of passing stimuli in order to engage it more deeply with an inward flow of words, ideas, and emotions. That was—and is—the essence of the unique mental process of deep reading. It was the technology of the book that made this “strange anomaly” in our psychological history possible. The brain of the book reader was more than a literate brain. It was a literary brain.” (62)
Carr develops this theme throughout - the importance, even essential - process of ‘deep reading’. For example, even the physical form of the brain changes . . .
“One of the most important lessons we’ve learned from the study of neuroplasticity is that the mental capacities, the very neural circuits, we develop for one purpose can be put to other uses as well. As our ancestors imbued their minds with the discipline to follow a line of argument or narrative through a succession of printed pages, they became more contemplative, reflective, and imaginative. “New thought came more readily to a brain that had already learned how to rearrange itself to read,” says Maryanne Wolf; “the increasingly sophisticated intellectual skills promoted by reading and writing added to our intellectual repertoire.” The quiet of deep reading became, as Stevens understood, “part of the mind.” (74)
Carr emphasizes that this - contemplative, reflective, imaginative - brain is being replaced by the - distracted, shallow brain.
“Jordan Grafman explains that the constant shifting of our attention when we’re online may make our brains more nimble when it comes to multitasking, but improving our ability to multitask actually hampers our ability to think deeply and creatively. “Does optimizing for multitasking result in better functioning—that is, creativity, inventiveness, productiveness? The answer is, in more cases than not, no,” says Grafman. “The more you multitask, the less deliberative you become; the less able to think and reason out a problem.”
Well. . .won’t all this extra information help?
“You become, he argues, more likely to rely on conventional ideas and solutions rather than challenging them with original lines of thought.’’ (140)
No ability to challenge ideas? Where is Luther, Galileo, Faraday - when we need them?
THE WATCHDOG AND THE THIEF
One HAL AND ME
Two THE VITAL PATHS - a digression on what the brain thinks about when it thinks about itself
Three TOOLS OF THE MIND
Four THE DEEPENING PAGE - a digression on lee de forest and his amazing audion
Five A MEDIUM OF THE MOST GENERAL NATURE
Six THE VERY IMAGE OF A BOOK
Seven THE JUGGLER’S BRAIN - a digression on the buoyancy of IQ scores
Eight THE CHURCH OF GOOGLE
Nine SEARCH, MEMORY - a digression on the writing of this book
Ten A THING LIKE ME
“What the Net diminishes is Johnson’s primary kind of knowledge: the ability to know, in depth, a subject for ourselves, to construct within our own minds the rich and idiosyncratic set of connections that give rise to a singular intelligence.’’ (143)
Another theme is the difference between human mental processes and computers. . .
“The old botanical metaphors for memory, with their emphasis on continual, indeterminate organic growth, are, it turns out, remarkably apt. In fact, they seem to be more fitting than our new, fashionably high-tech metaphors, which equate biological memory with the precisely defined bits of digital data stored in databases and processed by computer chips. Governed by highly variable biological signals, chemical, electrical, and genetic, every aspect of human memory—the way it’s formed, maintained, connected, recalled—has almost infinite gradations. Computer memory exists as simple binary bits—ones and zeros—that are processed through fixed circuits, which can be either open or closed but nothing in between.’’ (188)
Reminds me of the wise man’s illustration of spiritual growth -
“So he went on to say: “In this way the Kingdom of God is just as when a man casts seeds on the ground. He sleeps at night and rises up by day, and the seeds sprout and grow tall—just how, he does not know. On its own the ground bears fruit gradually, first the stalk, then the head, finally the full grain in the head.’’ (Mark 4:26)
A biological metaphor, not a mechanical one!
Carr connects another idea that I had not considered.
“As McLuhan acknowledged, he was far from the first to observe technology’s numbing effect. It’s an ancient idea, one that was given perhaps its most eloquent and ominous expression by the Old Testament psalmist:
“Their idols are silver and gold, The work of men’s hands.
They have mouths, but they speak not;
Eyes have they, but they see not;
They have ears, but they hear not;
Noses have they, but they smell not;
They have hands, but they handle not;
Feet have they, but they walk not;
Neither speak they through their throat.
They that make them are like unto them;
So is every one that trusteth in them.’’
“The price we pay to assume technology’s power is alienation. The toll can be particularly high with our intellectual technologies. The tools of the mind amplify and in turn numb the most intimate, the most human, of our natural capacities—those for reason, perception, memory, emotion.’’
Of course, the psalmist was condemning idols, not technology. Nevertheless, perhaps Carr has a point, maybe we really are ‘worshipping the work of our own hands’.
At the same time that the Internet is changing the world, bringing us closer together around masses of information, it is changing our ability to think and it is changing our brains in dangerous ways. The issue is not the content of the Internet, but its process.
The human adapts to its tools and its tasks. Give a man a hammer for a lifetime’s work and his body shapes to effectively drive nails. Take away his pen and give him a typewriter with a ball and his prose turns from fluid to staccato. (That happened to Nietzsche in the late nineteenth century.) In that process of adaption the brain, since it is not a machine but an organ, changes. These changes can be seen with instruments and their results observed in human behavior. This is the world of Nicholas Carr.
I will describe a tiny fraction of what the Internet is doing to our brains.
1) The brain, confronted with a glowing screen and the ability to hypertext its way from one interruption to another across the universe of knowledge from what its buddy in Australia thinks of rutabagas, to the spelling of rutabagas to the history of rutabagas to dishes that can be prepared from rutabagas leaves the brain sliding from one fact of surface interest to another fact even less useful, until it occurs to the brain to pursue the prompt on the pop-up menu and check the weather and get off of this slide onto the weather channel where a five minute video on playful seals on San Francisco Bay can be watched for free which does remind the brain that it could slide over to Facebook and find out if anyone “liked” the picture of the family cat posted an hour ago. And many do. Twenty-three “likes,” praise the Lord.
Just as the carpenter’s arm grew it muscles to deal effectively with the hammer the brain changes to succeed in a slippy slidey world of itty bitty bits of knowledge intended to interest momentarily and then disappear.
So what will happen when it confronts a life choice? Will this passive instrument skidding from meaningless bit to another meaningless bit see itself suddenly as an agent? A “decider?” Or will it in panic seek the next button to push, even if that button bears the label “Self Destruct?”
According to Time magazine this is happening now in the Silicon Valley high schools; kids depressed and without a sense of agency pushed around by the ripples on the surface of the Internet are choosing to leave life. Rutabagas have lost their interest. Having your cat liked did not fill the hole intended for having yourself loved. And this child is not accustomed to doing things about things. This child does not do. This child is done to. With the same alacrity that he or she pursued the prompt to watch the seals he or she may “decide” it is time to end this.
2) I discovered my wife of the last forty-three years with whom I have raised two children and now five grandchildren with much happiness when while sitting on her front lawn, I seriously told her my goals in life. She thought they were so funny she actually rolled over laughing.
If I had instituted a computer search what algorithm would have found her an appropriate match? Yet this brain of mine sorted through whatever book-formed channels it had and locked in immediately on her as the “one,” the antidote to the man who takes himself too seriously. The Internet would have provided me many potential companions, each more serious than the last. That is the way it works. It finds my interests and then adds to the pile. If I follow its suggestions I become narrower and narrower, a better candidate to respond to the advertisers, a defined target, and a wealth of possibilities pass me by.
3) For something to remain in long-term memory it must spend two hours in short term memory. (There is actually a tiny physical growth that must happen.) But on the trip through rutabaga land, things go in and out too quickly to be grafted on the long-term nodules. Of course it still exists in the computer’s memory. When you know you need it, it can be sought. However the advantage of the human memory is that it coughs up stored information when you need it but do not know you need it. Not only does your intellect call on your memory, but your memory initiates conversations with your intellect. You won’t have that ability any longer. And since your long-term memory is not being used the section of the brain devoted to long-term memory has already begun to shrink.
Distant memories of your mother’s tears, your father’s embrace, your sisters admiration and your little brother’s needs will be crowded out of the brain, and I doubt if you will find them in Internet land either.
4) There are now residential therapy centers to assist the hooked to unhook from the Internet. The Internet lights up the same section of the brain as does cocaine. Didn’t’ know those grade school kids were getting a buzz? Makes what may be happening to my grandchildren a little less cute and a little less funny.
Read The Shallows yourself. What I have written is just a corner of the future described there. See if it scares you! And if it does, see who else you can scare with it. Hope they have enough of an attention span left to read the book. (A sign of the times is that people who used to write books no longer can read them. Not enough slippy and slidey. Boring!)
Can the majority of us survive without complex and nuanced thought? Without deep and poignant memories? Do we want to?
Top reviews from other countries
I am honestly in love with this book. It is super interesting and it does not only talk about the internet, but also about other technologies like reading, writing, clocks and other tools that we use and how our brain starts to perceive them as extensions of our body or mind and how that affects us.
There is only one thing that I disagreed with. The author claims that some e-books are distractive and contain hyperlinks which would render deep reading impossible. I have read many things on my kindle, and if anything, the kindle has helped me stay focused as I could not simply tap on a word and see its meaning without having to use my phone which would bombard me with notifications the second I turned on the internet. However, I sort of know what the author was referring to. Funnily enough, I could click on a few books that the author has mentioned himself in this book and I did have to decide whenever I saw the book symbol next to the title if I did or did not want to check out the book. I did click on one of the links. This however disrupted the session of deep reading that I was having. Links inside of books can indeed get distracting or interrupt your reading, so I hope that fewer people will resort to hyperlinking everything inside books.
Otherwise, I am so happy to have read this book and I am tempted to buy a paper version of it as well. I'd totally recommend it if you are interested in how your brain works and reacts to changes in environment, tools and so on. It is very interesting to find out what changed people's minds in the past and what is happening to our minds today.









