pervect said:
Velocities in SR simply don't add linearly. This happens because of relativistic effects (length contraction, time dilation). So if you accelerate at 10 meters per second^2, you do not always add 10 meters to your velocity relative to your starting point in one second.
To me, that statement sounds like a contradiction. Are you using some odd defeinition of "accelerate"? The definition of acceleration which I am aware of is how much velocity you add per unit time. So, saying "you accelerate at X per second^2 but you don't add X per second to your velocity per second" seems like a logical contradiction, a contradiction in pure language, irrespective of any physics and mathematics involved. You're saying that P is true but the definition of P is false.
Within our frame of reference, one can certainly say, with perfect correctness, that the acceleration of the object decreases as it approaches the speed of light. It cannot possibly stay at 10 m/s^2, by the standard definition of acceleration. If we apply a constant force (using the usual definition of force) to the object, we really would find that its acceleration decreases as its velocity increases.
Now, we could choose to reconcile that with F=ma one of at least two ways: either by replacing "a" with a different definition of acceleration (in which velocity doesn't add linearly), as you might be suggesting, or by replacing "m" with "m + E/c^2" (I've proven this on paper; it's not wrong). But we
must replace "m" as above because energy has inertia and must be taken into account. So, since we obviously have to do that, and since that alone makes everything work out perfectly, why replace "a"?
I'm not trying to be argumentative, I just really don't understand what's wrong with that explanation.