I made no such claim, just open to possibilities in areas where science is still fuzzy and offers several interpretations. I am a firm believer in the old science adage that the universe in not only stranger than you imagine... it is stranger than you can imagine. Enough surprises have been discovered to make this obvious.
I see. You are not in that camp. Or are so wishy washy about it your opinions and ideas are undeveloped.
Then I have nothing to say to you.
I have a problem with the idea that time has some kind of permanent existence and it is possible to go back to any past moment in time because it is still out there somewhere and when, and would welcome reasons from anybody who thinks they can support the claim.
Simply saying that space and time are linked means nothing. I can no more go back to the space that existed in the past as the time.
OK, I will take one more punt at this.
There are no preferred reference frames; so any point in space time is an equally valid choice for the origin of a co-ordinate system. You can define any point only by reference to (at least) four dimensions - any fewer than this is not sufficient.
For example, I can say that I will meet you [in two hours]
T, [40.7484
oN]
Y of the equator, and [73.9857
oW]
X of the Greenwich meridian, and [14.3m]
Z above Mean Sea Level. The location of our meeting must be specified in all four dimensions, T, X, Y and Z; any way to specify the meeting with fewer than four dimensions is insufficient to ensure that we meet. If you turn up an hour late; or a degree too far North; or 373m too high above sea-level; or a degree too far East, you will miss me. Note that all of the dimensions are identical in this respect; there is nothing 'special' about the T dimension.
All of spacetime can be specified in this way; and ANY of the dimensions is subject to variation. There is no reason to give the T dimension any special status not accorded to the X, Y and Z dimensions; if you change any of them, then you change your place in spacetime.
Your location in spacetime varies; If no force acts upon a body, it continues to move in all four dimensions at a constant rate. In deep space, where gravity and electromagnetic forces are negligible, you cannot alter your motion in any of the dimensions at all; However with a handy planet to push against, and a gravitational well to accelerate you towards said planet, motion in the X and Y dimensions, and to a lesser degree in the Z dimension, becomes easy. As yet, we haven't found anything to use to alter the T dimension element of our velocity.
An event has a location in spacetime. If you go to meet me in twenty-two hours, 40.7484
oN of the equator, 73.9857
oW of the Greenwich meridian, and 14.3m above Mean Sea Level, you will not see me standing in the lobby of the Empire State building, because you will be in the wrong place in spacetime - you only got three of the four coordinates correct - I am twenty hours earlier than you.
If you go to meet me in in two hours, at a point 40.7484
oN of the equator, and 14.3m above Mean Sea Level, but at 0
oE/W of Greenwich, you will not see me standing in the lobby of the Empire State Building either, because you will be buried 730m down in the bedrock under a farmer's field somewhere near the township of Peñarroya de Tastavins in the Aragon region of Eastern Spain. Again, with three of the four coordinates correct, you are in a different spacetime location, so you will not see what you would see if you were in the 'right spot' in each of the four dimensions.
The spacetime coordinates, X, Y, Z and T define an event; Change one, and you are no longer at that event. This doesn't mean that the points in spacetime you do not currently occupy don't exist. It is no more reasonable to say that the Empire State Building lobby yesterday no longer exists, than it is to stand in the lobby of the Empire State Building and say that the rock strata beneath the farmer's field in Aragon, Spain don't exist right now. You are in neither place; but both still exist.
We think of 'down' as being fundamental, and of our motion forward in time as being fundamental, but these are illusions caused by our local conditions. There is no such thing as 'down' except by reference to a gravitational well; and there is no such thing as 'now' except by reference to a conscious brain.
The assumption that local conditions are universal is understandable, but it is wrong. People used to think that all motion required a force to sustain it - but that is actually only true under certain rare conditions. It is just that those rare conditions are necessary for our kind of life, so we have evolved to assume that they are universal, because they ARE universal in the tiny part of the universe we personally experience.
People used to think that time was fundamentally different from space. But it's not. Or at least, we have yet to find any way in which it is.