And since the speed of light is finite, it can be surpassed.
I believe you're still not understanding things here. There's a speed-limit in the universe. As yet, unlike the speed of sound (which is nothing like the same kind of limit, anyway), there is no known way that
anything can pass through this universal limit. We call it the Speed Of Light because light 'particles'(/'waves', whatever) travel this fast, due to their particular qualities, but it's also the apparent (at least, last time I checked it up) speed of gravitational influence, and also regulates all the other fundemental forces and interactions, including (if you deal with tham as independent and
not components of the electromagnetic force already covered) the charge/magnetic ones.
If (for some reason) what we thought of as photons were actually
<c conveyors of information, but with the same constant of 'c' in its other practical uses, then light would be different. (Or we'd be ignoring the 'true' light, or something...)
But minds much more succinct than mine can probably sum this up in far less space. And perhaps without introducing any further misunderstandings due to bad phrasing. I look forward to seeing this, but... I just had to say...
(If there's a way to make FTL transport/communication work, though, it's likely to be by "cheating". Shortcuts between different bits of space, warping the space so that it's locally a matter of staying <=c, that sort of thing.
A not so fun fact is that despite this, we'll almost certainly never visit other galaxies, no matter how fast we can accelerate ourselves, due to the expansion of the universe being faster than the speed of light at significant enough distances. Maybe a couple of the close ones are potentially reachable, but the far edge ones are beyond our grasp (the light our galaxy's emitting right now will never reach them either).
It's my impression that the "big rip", the time-scale at which the (apparent) expansion takes now-visible distant galaxies outside of our visible radius (or we go outside of
their beamable-event horizon) is still a long way off for any practical-to-visit galaxies[2]. Unless we are for some reason sticking to
BDR-technology, as noted below.
[2] I think the big problem will be, for the further places, is that by the time we reach them, they have aged twice as much (assuming a SoL journey retracing their original light[3]) as they did while the light managed to reach
us, and that they'd be burnt out husks of no import except for studtying in a 'stellarchaeological' manner. But I'm not sure exactly where the magnitudes of age cross either dividing line.
[3] Perhaps slightly more due to them 'retreating', but the real humdinger might be if we just didn't have the velocity to even
get close to a SoL return. Because (who knows) a generation or five-hundred later Earth-dwellers (or those from New-Earth, depending on the situation) might well be sending out expeditions
with the better technology, which overtake (or by-pass) the earlier expeditions, and be waiting (or have given up the ghost) by the time the earlier people get there...