What I'm talking about... yes, it is "special" relativity, and not "specific" relativity. I was taking something from a memory of almost 20 years ago and trying to apply it without sitting down for 6 or 8 hours to try to dig through boxes and boxes of notes from college (it's honestly not THAT important to me). Yet the professor I was speaking to seemed to believe that the time dilation effect of relativity didn't hold if inertia was completely suspended, and that much I remember solidly. Thus, if we develop something like artificial gravity, and envelop a space ship in something akin to a bubble of gravity with a high enough exterior density to negate inertia, it can travel at much greater than the speed of light without the specific relativistic perturbations... again, it depends on technology that is only theoretically possible and which doesn't have enough practicality to it to become technology. I might argue about the idea of a man-portable lightsaber from Star Wars, but the fact is that until we come up with a means of doing something even close to that, any discussion devolves into intellectual masturbation.
The essence of what I said remains, whether the science is there to back it or not, because it's all theory and philosophy until someone does it. I don't deal with this on a regular enough basis to know lots about it. So be that as it may, we can write anything we want to in fiction, because we really don't know everything there is about the universe or its rules... and if it bothers anyone so greatly that they can't suspend their disbelief for just a moment, I have a great little UFO report for you which might help you with such a suspension, if even for only a moment.
Just so we're clear, it demonstrates using both eyewitness accounts and radar data that a large, unidentified flying craft (object) did travel at over 2000 km/h over the course of 10 seconds, and while it was not demonstrated that it was a manned craft, I would remind you that electrical devices such as lights are still subject to the laws of relativity, and would necessarily break under sudden starting and stopping conditions which were both witnessed and measured. While we can't say that it was definitely an alien space ship (or whatever), we can say that the math my professor was talking about is borne out with a demonstration such as this.
Food for thought: we live in an energetic universe, as matter and energy are interchangeable. If we accept that E = mc
2, then we accept that m = sqrt(c)E ... sqrt meaning "square root" of course.
Nobody's done that, so the key phrase here is:
"Until we're actually there, we can't know whether or not it's even possible to negate G-forces to a point that it makes FTL worthwhile."
Thus, this will be my last post on the topic, and I'll let the experts who seem to know everything about the universe have at it.