Suit yourself
Edit:
Ok, I had to come back and amuse myself.
Here's what was said that got me into this discussion:
Tristan: (Force Dynamics comes closest, but it's only 1g sustained,
You: No. It can not exert sustained acceleration. To feel any kind of acceleration on yourself, you need to MOVE.
I said it wasn't necessary to move. Just pop your feet up in the air and you will feel exactly as though you were accelerating at 1g. I meant "forward," but didn't say so. I figured everyone would understand that, and they did, with the exception of yourself
You don't have to move at all to feel an acceleration. If you're stationary in a gravitational field you feel exactly as though you are accelerating. You are right now, "feeling an acceleration" straight upwards. Are you literally accelerating? Outside the context of 4D space where most of us spend our intellectual time, no. I agree. Your position isn't changing so you aren't accelerating. Nobody is arguing that.
However, you are indeed "feeling as though you were accelerating" at 1g. (Is it ok if people use the term "feel an acceleration" there? According to GR that's just fine because it really winds up working out just like that. You'll learn that later in school hopefully.) I.e., if there were no gravity and you were pushed upwards at 1g, it would feel exactly the same as if you were sitting on Earth, not accelerating at all. And in the latter case, there is no movement. So the statement you made in reference to a motion platform that sits at an angle to give the impression of forward/rearward/sideways sustained acceleration:
"It can not exert sustained acceleration."
Is sort of correct if taken literally word for word, although if you want to split hairs you don't "exert" an acceleration so the statement is meaningless. But I wasn't going to be anal and pick apart your sentence. I understood what you meant and just carried on.
Anyway, the next statement you made:
"To feel any kind of acceleration on yourself, you need to MOVE."
Is categorically false for the reasons given. Remember, the verb there is "feel." I.e., "to feel as though one is accelerating," not to literally be accelerating.
What's most amusing to me about this whole thread is that the people that know nothing about physics at all, or know less than you or I or Dr. V. over there might, understood this immediately.
"To accelerate you need to move"
Yes.
"To feel any kind of acceleration on yourself, you need to MOVE."
Nope. I am feeling exactly as though I were accelerating straight up at 1g in the absence of gravity right now and I'm not moving anywhere.
The tilting motion platforms are a snazzy idea because they can
make you feel as though you were sustaining an acceleration of some kind in the direction of interest.