I've been a fan of astronomy for quite a while, and I've been watching stuff like PBS Spacetime on Youtube as something I'm vaguely interested in. Some of the stuff flies over my head, but I have a question if anyone has an answer: Is... is movement, and by extention all the space that that movement takes place in, an illusion? That's probably phrased stupidly, but I was thinking about relativity, like, that there is a speed limit that nothing can reach, and that's c, the speed of light. What defines movement though? What is an object's velocity being compared to which determines how 'fast' it is going compared to light? Relativity, if I'm understanding it correctly, is that light is always moving at c, no matter how fast *you* are going, from your perspective, due to time dilation. That because time slows down as you speed up, from your perspective light is always moving just as fast as it always is, you never perceive yourself as 'catching up' to it no matter how hard you're hitting the gas on your space ship, light is always just that much faster because we're measuring ourselves against it. But again, what is movement? I suppose it is the relative speed we perceive ourselves to be moving in relation to other objects. So, assuming that we can build two spaceships that can move at 50% c, and we have them do a full speed flyby past eachother, would each one see the other as moving *at* c, since their relative speeds are additive to their observations?
Though another thing I don't get about time dilation, is that since light is moving at c, time is not moving for the light photon at all. If a photon is created, and it travels 100,000,000 light years across the universe until it hits an object, then obviously a hundred million years passed from our perspective, but from the photon's perspective that entire journey happened instantaneously... How is that possible, how can something experience no time, but also be able to move? I feel that there is something really fundamental I'm missing here.
But getting back to the 'movement and space is an illusion' question, I take it that photons, and other fundamental particles that makes up atoms, are actually moving through a kinda of 'field' that gives them mass. That all the electrons and protons and crap are just whizzing about in this field, and that is what makes them 'real', that they're all *trying* to move at c, but this field slows them down and makes them live a humble life as part of a molecule or something, otherwise they'd all be... energy? This is the part I'm sketchiest on, the idea that energy is matter and matter is energy, just in different forms, but what I took away from it is that, reduced to their smallest particles, everything just wants to move at c, everything wants to exist in that timeless perspective, so to us in the macroscopic world, time and space are realities, but to the quantum world, the world which makes up all the atoms we are made of, time and space are illusions...
I actually wanted to ask this question to Neil Degrasse Tyson when he visited Detroit, which is within driving distance from me, but I just couldn't make it. Perhaps it's for the best, I probably would have embarrassed myself trying to spit it all out in front of him.