it really stretches plausibility to say that the Internet could be something like a drug.
The brain appears to have separable capabilities for wanting something and enjoying something. There are definitely some things that I feel urges to do but don’t particularly enjoy at any point. A common example is lashing out at someone verbally—sometimes, especially on the internet, I have urges to be a jerk, but when I act on those urges it isn’t rewarding to me.
I guess I can’t identify with that feeling. I don’t think I’ve ever felt that way—I’ve never wanted something that I could have identified as “not rewarding” at the time that I wanted it (regardless of the how long I reflected on it). The only times I wanted something but didn’t enjoy it was because of lack of information.
The brain appears to have separable capabilities for wanting something and enjoying something. There are definitely some things that I feel urges to do but don’t particularly enjoy at any point. A common example is lashing out at someone verbally—sometimes, especially on the internet, I have urges to be a jerk, but when I act on those urges it isn’t rewarding to me.
Aaanyhow, your sentence is also the worst argument :P
I guess I can’t identify with that feeling. I don’t think I’ve ever felt that way—I’ve never wanted something that I could have identified as “not rewarding” at the time that I wanted it (regardless of the how long I reflected on it). The only times I wanted something but didn’t enjoy it was because of lack of information.