I found it difficult to “feel” the no addiction and no risk things. If I spend a full week on pure bliss, is the rest of my life going to feel drab or painful by comparison? If you do something that makes you happy, you generally want more of that so if Mac’s Wirehead Homestead makes you perfectly happy for a week, aren’t you going to crave more of it?
The no addiction assumption is included to make clear that the “wanting” part of your brain will not be hijacked; you will only engage in wireheading after the vacation if you make a sober choice to do so. Wanting vs. Liking summarized here:
I found it difficult to “feel” the no addiction and no risk things. If I spend a full week on pure bliss, is the rest of my life going to feel drab or painful by comparison? If you do something that makes you happy, you generally want more of that so if Mac’s Wirehead Homestead makes you perfectly happy for a week, aren’t you going to crave more of it?
The no addiction assumption is included to make clear that the “wanting” part of your brain will not be hijacked; you will only engage in wireheading after the vacation if you make a sober choice to do so. Wanting vs. Liking summarized here:
http://lesswrong.com/lw/4yq/the_neuroscience_of_pleasure/
I agree with your prediction that a person who chooses the vacation will most likely pursue wireheading when he/she returns home.
(Best sex ever + Best joke ever + Best meal ever + Best love ever +… Best whatever ever)^(3^^^3) for a week would make quite an impression.