In many different ways, Deformed Special Relativity (DSR) has been argued to
provide an effective limit of quantum gravity in almost-flat regime. Some
experiments will soon be able to test some low energy effects of quantum
gravity, and DSR is a very promising candidate to describe these latter.
Unfortunately DSR is up to now plagued by many conceptual problems (in
particular how it describes macroscopic objects) which forbids a definitive
physical interpretation and clear predictions. Here we propose a consistent
framework to interpret DSR. We extend the principle of relativity: the same way
that Special Relativity showed us that the definition of a reference frame
requires to specify its speed, we show that DSR implies that we must also take
into account its mass. We further advocate a 5-dimensional point of view on DSR
physics and the extension of the kinematical symmetry from the Poincare group
to the Poincare-de Sitter group (ISO(4,1)). This leads us to introduce the
concept of a pentamomentum and to take into account the renormalization of the
DSR deformation parameter kappa. This allows the resolution of the "soccer ball
problem" (definition of many-particle-states) and provides a physical
interpretation of the non-commutativity and non-associativity of the addition
the relativistic quadrimomentum. In particular, the coproduct of the
kappa-Poincare algebra is interpreted as defining the law of change of
reference frames and not the law of scattering. This point of view places DSR
as a theory, half-way between Special Relativity and General Relativity,
effectively implementing the Schwarzschild mass bound in a flat relativistic
context.Comment: 24 pages, Revtex