I’ll bet you do, probably
multiple times a day. It’s the first choice when facts are needed, whether it
be some odd piece of data or a critical piece of information. Get into a
dispute with friends, and someone (perhaps everyone) will do it to bolster
their side or settle the argument. Ask a dumb question – on-line or even in
person – a question that you should be able to find out for yourself, and
you’ll be told (not always politely) to JGI: Just Google It.
It’s Indisputably
great to have all the worlds’ information (at least that’s what it feels
like) at your command at all times. Having a smartphone in your pocket, with
links to Google (and Wikipedia), and perhaps even a human language interface
like Siri, was the stuff of science fiction not long ago. We should be slow to
shed the wow factor, because it is still a wow.
We use it for so many
purposes, both material and trivial. This week I JGIed (I’m declaring that a
word) “vision statements” to help during a strategic planning session for the
West Chester Public Library. Just a few hours later, I JGIed “sylvester
stallone age” after seeing a trailer for his latest action movie (yes he’s a
little old for this role, Google confirmed). More than once a resort to JGI
has soothed a dispute between me and my wife, that might have deteriorated into
bickering. Contrary to what you may think, I haven’t always been proved right.
But witnessing JGI in action
so frequently now, I’m becoming concerned we may be pulling the JGI trigger too
quickly and too often. It’s nice to settle arguments (although not every resort
to Google does), but some friendly disputes should be argued out, your best
points vs. mine. There’s something to be said for making your case the old
fashioned way, with what you know and how you can best express it, and then
really listening to the other side. Of course when a plain fact is in dispute, certainly
JGI can help, but even then I think it’s not always better that we press a
button and the fact appears. Einstein is supposed to have said that he never committed
anything to memory that he could look up. With Google always in reach, will we ever
have to remember anything?
It’s also a mistake to
confuse facts with knowledge. Google can pull up a million hits on every
subject, but turning that into knowledge and understanding is something that
still takes a human mind.
The always fascinating
technology writer Nicholas Carr (you remember “Does IT Matter?”) wrote a recent
book called “The Shallows”, based on an article in the Atlantic more pointedly
titled “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” It opens with the monolog by HAL in 2001:
A Space Odyssey as he plaintively tells Dave that “my mind is going” as the
astronaut relentlessly disconnects the components of his brain. Carr can feel
his mind going too, as he recounts his early days as a thinker, writer and
researcher who used to dive deep, like a scuba diver, for information and
knowledge; now, he says, he’s like a guy on a jet ski, skimming across the
surface. Access to an ocean of facts all at once can do that to you.
Carr’s argument is not that
Google is making us stupid necessarily, but that it’s certainly making us
intellectually lazy. Though many have disputed his thesis, I find it hard not
to agree.
Like everything it seems
Google is a double-edged sword. An incomparable tool for accessing facts at all
times and in all places, but containing within it an intellectual sedative that
can make us dull, lazy and addicted to someone else’s data, rather than reliant on our own
memories and knowledge. We should JGI sparingly, and wisely.
2 comments:
I think I do have to disagree with you on this one. I don't think Google or any other site can "make you stupid". You yourself are the only one who can do that. That implies, of course that you can make yourself smart as well. And I don't think smart means knowing facts. That only makes you good at Trivial Pursuit.
Rather, I think the only thing that makes you "smart" is thinking. I often think back to something my college chemistry professor told me when I was just a freshman in college. (This was when dinosaurs walked the earth.) He told me that we wasn't trying to teach me any chemistry in his class. His goal was to teach me how to think. He said that if I know how to think, then I'll understand chemistry easily. Some 40ish years later I still remember that often. (And I did manage to get my degree in Chemistry as well.)
So for me, Google doesn't take away my ability to think, it enhances it. I understand completely what Einstein meant. Unencumbered by the need to remember facts, my brain can focus on reasoning and doing "imaginary experiments" as a thinking tool. Einstein also said that every experiment he ever conducted was done in his imagination.
So, for me, Google, Wikipedia, et al. are just tools I may need to enhance my thoughts. Memorizing all that "stuff" wouldn't help me at all. Plus I'm inherently lazy.
I have a feeling we're going to touch on this in class, but I couldn't resist :)
"With Google always in reach, will we ever have to remember anything?"
This begs the question - do we have to remember anything? Well, of course we do, but do we have to remember all the stuff an education system that clearly isn't the best states we do? I don't think so - not at all.
Ultimately I think critical thinking is more important. I'm not sure if you've encountered the people who can memorize almost anything instantly, but couldn't critical think their way out of a wet paper bag. I've only been in IT for 10 years, but I've run into quite a few of these people.
I don't believe that Google is going to affect the human capacity to critical think. I think not being able to recite the OSI model from memory may make you look dumb in some cases, but I'd question the critical thinking of the person who uses recitation of facts as an indicator of real intelligence. It should be a combination of both - certain things clearly need to be memorized, but every small detail doesn't - Einstein should definitely be followed on that.
Post a Comment