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I don't see what that quote has to do with anything. If a vessel is accelerating under its own thrust, we don't need to do any experiments to know whether the acceleration felt by the occupants inside is from gravity, because we know where it's coming from--their reference frame (the spacecraft) is accelerating.Not quite correct - an inertial frame is free of proper acceleration.
Also, about reference frames in general relativity (not just inertial ones):
There is no experiment observers can perform to distinguish whether an acceleration arises because of a gravitational force or because their reference frame is accelerating. —Douglas C. Giancoli, Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics, p. 155.
The occupants of the spacecraft feel the effect of 10g acceleration. The occupants of Earth do not. Ergo, the spacecraft is accelerating, and the Earth is not--it is not equally valid to say that the Earth is accelerating away from the spacecraft.