Your claims are either too vague to be meaningful or just wrong. Observed (empirical) space-time curvature is close to zero (flat). We get very good agreement with our theories assuming space is flat but expanding.
We know NOTHING about 10E-43 seconds after creation. The fact is our theories EXTRAPOLATE to zero time, and there is no good reason to assume that the extrapolation is correct, just as there is no good reason to assume it is not. IOW, there may have never been a creation event, or it may have occurred at a time much different than that which we assign it. What we DO know is that various parts and pieces begin to make sense after cosmic inflation. Inflation is currently considered a result of a scalar potential field, which has no experimental evidence supporting it. (As opposed to inflation, which has a single report of B-mode polarization consistent with it). We have no theories I am aware of that allow more than 1 (or less than 1) time dimension.
I have no idea what you mean when you claim that time and space distinction is only empirical. This seems to me to be more nonsense. Please give me a single example of an emprical observation of space which includes no duration or just as good, give me an empirical observation of time with no spatial extent?
Planck time is 5.3E-44 seconds. Our theories fail long before this (on a logarithmic scale). What you should consider is the temperature at the time in discussion, and compare that temperature to the temperatures we are able to attain at the LHC. You should also consider the proportion of the Universe's energy we do NOT understand (dark energy, inflaton field, dark matter,...) and if that doesn't lead you to conclude that worrying too much about times before ~10^-18 sec is a fools errand, then good luck to you.