http://www.alaska.net/~clund/e_djublonskopf/Flatearthsociety.htmThat's where I read your thing about "ether." Unless you want to recant that. I did not pull it up out of nowhere.
Space is NOT a perfect vacuum. There is no such thing as a "perfect vacuum." In fact, particle accelerators have a "more perfect" vacuum than space does.
Why I assume spacetime is not accelerating? Well..........
If spacetime is accelerating along with the earth and the sun and everything else, then we would feel no gravitation effect puling us to the earth because the earth is not accelerating relative to spaceitme... we would instead be feeling a gravitational effect pulling us toward spacetime.. which directly contradicts observations... and then, if spacetime is accelerating, what is it accelerating relative to?
/* The Flat Earth could accelerate forever - to you and me on the surface, you have to remember our perception of time is different to that of an inertial observer, so while they may say "OMG j00 are at lyk 0.99999999999c", to you or me that's a nonsense statement, since there is no 'absolute velocity' in the Universe. To us, we're just feeling a force pushing us upwards, apparently with everything else in the Universe. */
Let me explain this another way by pointing out another inconsistency, since you don't seem to get the previous one.
There is an absolute velocity through spacetime - c. The more you travel in space, the less you travel in time, and vice versa.
Time and space are discrete units and are not continuous. This was proven to be true because classical physics calculations relying on continuous frequencies yielded infinity for energy calculations. Energy depends on amplitude and solely amplitude; therefore, one could theoretically decrease the wavelength indefinitely, yielding infinite energy. Which obviously does not happen. This was the problem with calculating black body radiation.
Therefore, there is a limit to how fast you can travel in space while still traveling in time: c - h (planck's constant)
Once you reach this limit, you can't accelerate anymore without reaching c.
And about the previous argument... let's dumb the numbers down a bit. Suppose we're accelerating at 0.01 m/s, and the speed of light (the limiting speed) is 10 m/s. Can we accelerate at 0.01 m/s forever without surpassing this limit? Obviously not... without decreasing our acceleration, which would entail a decrease in apparent gravity.
And about the particle accelerators... even while energy is STILL BEING ADDED, we can see that more and more of this is manifesting itself as mass and not acceleration.