Google has an answer for almost anything. Any remarkable slice of information, any essay on a mind-boggling multitude of subjects. Facts about bats, about countries, about politics and philosophy. Facts about why a certain thing smells a certain way. Why your toes are all tingly.
It has the answers so you don’t have to. And it’s making your brain atrophy, like the ill-used muscles of a bed bound athlete.
Well, sort of.
The Internet is making us a different kind of stupid. Google’s own mission statement is to curate all the information in the world. To take everything from our collective conscience, humanity’s greatest and not-so-great works, and store it for us all. All you’ll have to do is remember how to access it.
Humans know we can’t fit all that information into our brains, even though they are far and away the best super-computing devices in the known universe. So we share the burden of memory. Particularly in close relationships. You remember where the account details are and he remembers where the password to your online phone bill. Or some variation of the two.
But studies show we’ve jettisoned the use of family and friends in this respect for the convenience of Google.
So Google hasn’t destroyed our brains or rotted them to the core. It has, however, changed what we remember. We no longer remember the ‘what’ (what’s the capital of Brunei?) but the ‘how’ (how can I quickly find out what the capital to Brunei is?).
1. You can get information quicker, so your attention span is shot.
A four-year-old child can find out in 0.15 seconds what it used to take a grown adult weeks of research in a library to achieve.