I'm still hoping for FTL travel. Physical travel past the speed of light has been disproven (though I believe it's possible, breaking the sound barrier was impossible until it was done), however the technology which is being researched which bends space looks promising. http://techland.time.com/2012/09/19/nasa-actually-working-on-faster-than-light-warp-drive/
Given the exponential rate of technological advancement, I'd love to see this in my lifetime. I want to visit another star in my lifetime.
Bullets etc could already break the sound barrier before we did it with a plane. But nothing in the universe tops light speed. Totally different, to e.g. heavier than air flight which was "impossible" before the Wright Brothers. But birds have done it forever.
One problem with travel even near the speed of light is that stationary protons etc become waves relative to your travel. They become supercharged particles, so light speed travel is like sitting inside a particle collider. We need something that could withstand the direct beam of the LHC and not kill people with the radiation. Near light speed there is no time for the heavy particles to go around you, so they go through you, but blue shifted into high energy spectrum..
My money is on the idea that literally raising the dead will be scientifically more achievable than FTL travel.
That's... a stranger argument than I would have given.
More realistically, the laws of physics create a 'barrier' from passing light-speed because as one starts to approach light-speed (w.r.t. any other datum, for the purists), you'll still find that light is going at "light speed" past you
anyway, and you've made no headway. From an external observer, this is primarily because of time dilation (meaning that time passes for you slower and slower (not to mention the mass and distance problems, etc), and so all applied effort ends up counting for less and less in a "you'll never reach it" situation, for any time period less than "forever".
("There's no time for particles to go around you" is an argument used against supersonic flight, and that manages well enough. But can't be easily analogued to light-barrier-breaking.)
Interestingly, if you're something that
habitually travels at >c (should there be such a thing), the same laws lay down reasons why you can't slow down
to the speed of light. And 'speed of light' things can
only go the speed of light, for similar reasons (though, for example, light through a refractive medium ends up going 'slower' because it's not going straight through... ...is probably the best explanation for
this post, and Wave/Particle duality is a tricky thing to discuss, from cold).
FTL travel might be possible be "shortcut" methods (i.e. non-FTL travel along alternate, shorter, paths), but there's a whole lot of "maybe" in those concepts. The operation of the Alcubierre Drive is in this area, but shares territory with wormhole creation when it comes to needing 'exotic' space-warping to achieve the ultimate goal.