omin said:
In terms of the said theory Special or General Theory, What is this thing called Space?
Naively, "[three-dimensional] space" is an instant of time.
Consider the case of Galilean Relativity ("Galilean Spacetime") or Special Relativity ("Minkowski Spacetime").
Given an observer and a given event on his worldline, "space [for that observer, at that instant]" is the set of all events that are simultaneous with that event.
In Galilean Relativity, it turns out that: all observers will agree on the set of events constituting space at that instant. In Special Relativity, of course, there is disagreement. This is the relativity of simultaneity.
This following picture is helpful. Imagine a cube [representing spacetime] and a vertical or slightly-tilted-off-vertical thread [representing the worldline of an inertial observer] running through that cube. Now imagine slicing up that cube into parallel slices [described below], each slice containing a point of that thread. [This is a "foliation".]
In Galilean relativity, those slices are horizontal slices, independent of the tilting of the thread. (Geometrically, those slices are [Galilean-]orthogonal to the thread.)
In special relativity, those slices are [Minkowski]-orthogonal to the thread, and do depend of the tilting of the thread. Pictorially speaking: when the thread is tilted by an angle Q to the right off the vertical, the slices are tilted by an angle Q up off the horizontal.
In general relativity, this notion is captured by the idea of a foliation of a spacetime manifold into "spacelike slices" (fancy form: "spacelike hypersurfaces").
(for some definitions, you might want to google the quoted phrases)