I'm not so sure about this, but I believe that's a consequence of dilation and not actually lack of acceleration. From your POV, you keep accelerating at the same rate, so you ARE going "faster and faster", but from the external POV you seem to be accelerating less and less. Or is it the other way around? That's why as you approach C, the people inside the ship could perceive a trip to be (near) instant, while people outside will still think you still took 4 or more years to reach the nearest star.
Ah, yes, you seem to be on the right track, as far as I can tell. There's just one more problem that I can see there. Mainly, what if you don't have any "destination point" and you just keep accelerating?
From the POV of external observer, it's rather easy to deduce: the spaceship's mass increases, it accelerates ever more slowly and it's on-board time slows down(with complete "time-stop" as the unatainable limit - asymptotic approach).
But what about POV of the space ship? As you accelerate, the universe becomes smaller in the direction of your travel(lenght contraction), but with what exactly as a limit?
And what is there to stop you from accelerating beyond said limit?
Anyway, I'll try to satisfy my failed physicist ego now, by correcting what I feel was incorrect:
Some energy has mass, yes. But he was treating that as universally true. Which it ain't.
It's all very blurry in my memory, but isn't it wrong? Energy has no mass
per se, instead it's more correct to state that energy is a form of mass/mass is a form of energy. Or that you can associate mass to an energy quantum(and vice versa).
Maybe I got your words wrong, but are you not claiming that some forms of energy cannot be associated with mass? If so, then which ones and why(in your opinion)?
You're both kind of right. Light as a field would have no mass, but the individual photons do. Remember that light can be observed as either a particle or a wave.
1.Ok, so light is not an EM field. It's said field's oscillations.
2.And as long as you can associate energy with something, you can also associate mass to it.
3.You have to remember that changing the description mode cannot result in contradictory results e.g., light cannot gain or lose mass, just by changing description mode from wave to particle.
What happens if you calculate the red shift on an object going .99c away from you? Current theory says you'll still measure that photon as going c, but it'll be redshift out of existance, doesn't it?
It'll just have a "very" low energy=huge wavelenght. It won't dissapear by any means.
Actually, I don't get your argument. How light's frequency being dependent on source's velocity contradicts the v=c postulate?
My knowledge is rather rusty, so feel free to tell me that I got something wrong.