answer:I don’t think the Agony Booth electrocutes people. It uses nerve induction to directly stimulate the pain receptors of the brain without causing physical damage. There’s a limited amout of pain it can cause, however, since it’s stimulating the nerves and not the brain directly. Nerve endings have limited capacity to transmit pain, after which there is a refractory period during which the nerve has to recover. If I was going to design an Agony Booth, I’d move the induction field around at random over the body giving the nerves brief periods to recover while simultaneously preventing the subject from knowing where the pain is going to come from next. Assuming this is how the Agony Booth works, I would probably use it for nothing. The ability to experience agonizing pain without suffering physical damage would be an excellent way to practice meditation. The full-lotus meditation position, for example, is used by Zen masters to cause excruciating pain the legs to use as a focus while meditating. The Agony Booth is adjustable and harmless, so would be the ideal tool for slowly ramping up the level of pain a person can tolerate, thus achieving a deeper and deeper level of meditation. Getting paid for this would just be a bonus.