spacecadet11 said:
Inertia is the resistance a material object has to a change in it's present motion because of an applied force..or even if an object is initially motionless.
I don't really like to look at this way. It's valid, but it's not particularly meaningful or instructive.
First, consider that these two things are the same:
1. An object not moving.
2. An object moving in a straight line at a steady speed.
Any perceived difference is due only to your motion relative to the object. And there's no experiment you can perform that will allow you to determine which of the two things you are doing!
So in this sense inertia is not a property of the object, but rather a consequence of your (an observer's) motion through space.
Secondly, when an object does undergo a change in it's velocity, there's a direct proportion between the rate at which its velocity changes (its acceleration) and the force applied to the object. One might wonder why, when the same force is applied to two different objects, they don't have the same acceleration. And the answer is that there's a property these objects have that can be used to explain why this happens. That property is called the mass. But it only explains it insofar as to be able to predict that when an object has a larger mass it undergoes a smaller acceleration. There is nothing more to it than that. It's simply the fact that this property can be used by scientists to make predictions about how things move, and engineers can use it to design and build things that work for us. It's the utility of the concept, not any underlying philosophical consideration, that explains its presence.
This became quite clear in the very early 1900's when it was shown by both theory and experiment that the direct proportion between force and acceleration is an approximation that's valid only for speeds small compared to the speed of light, and that the energy of its internal constituents make a contribution to the object's mass. After all, how can the validity of a concept have a deeper philosophical meaning when it's no longer valid?
Why does matter have this quality?
The closest question to that asked by physicists: What gives the fundamental particles their mass?
In the vacuum of outer space should it require virtually no energy to impart momentum to matter?
Imagine an astronaut on a space walk using her legs to push off the side of the ISS. Do you suppose that the astronaut and the ISS will undergo the same acceleration? Or do you suppose that the astronaut will undergo the larger acceleration because of her smaller mass?