I am new to this subject, and there's a problem that is really bugging me. If we put a charge $q$ inside a spherical cavity in a spherical conductor, even if it is off-center, the charges on the outer surface will distribute evenly, and will cause a uniform field, as if the charge $q$ was at the center.
The reasoning that is given for this is that since there is no electrical field inside the volume of the conductor, the best configuration for the outer surface charges is to distribute evenly. The field is zero since if it wasn't, then the charges would rearrange to eventually cancel it. But, if a charge is placed off-center in the cavity, I think it will surely be attracted towards the side it is closer to, and move towards it. And this would also cause the charges in the inner surface to redistribute continuously; the charge density would increase gradually in the region close to that charge. The whole assumption that the field inside the conductor is zero is based on the charges having attained static positions, but this doesn't seem to be a static situation? Where am I wrong in my reasoning?