in the above space-time
What above space-time?
He was referring to the above post you noob!
That's odd, since no post above his directly mentions "space-time." My inquiry, you bumbling fool, was more to show that he had copy-pasted something rather than come up with a post that was coherent to the discussion.
Newtonian gravity models gravity in terms of force fields, General relativity models gravity in terms of space time curvature. Both these models are primarily mathematical rather than ontological in nature.
In special relativity we use flat space time to model the motion of objects, etc. Special relativity is more a kinematical theory that doesn't model gravity. But when we start to use a wider variety of space times (i.e. don't stick to just flat space time) we find we can model gravity too using space time.
What I'm trying to say is general relativity doesn't really try to answer questions like 'what causes gravity?' and 'what ware these warps in the fabric of space time really?', it just provides a mathematical model that makes predictions that can be tested.
Okay that may seem rather dry, but really that's all that general relativity does, any philosophical implications are things that we read into the theory.