In "Questions, Objections and Answers," Schlesinger dissects some arguments that suggest that space and time are not similar and possess qualities that the other does not have. For example, that one can ask, "Where are you," but not "When are you?" He breaks down illogical perceptions of space and time to show their similarities. Here is an example:
"Bernard Mayo examines the question whether space has order and direction in a fashion that parallels order and direction in time..."
He responds to this later in the answers section:
"Mayo errs by thinking that we cannot compare a succession of moments with a series of Euclidean plane surfaces. The truth is that both are full-fledged successions, possessing all the properties that are possessed by ordered series of elements succeeding one another."
Such as, this lamp is closer spatially than that cup, so one precedes the other, in the same way that a moment precedes another moment. However, the spacial "preceding" comes in terms of someone's perspective- otherwise one could say that the cup precedes the lamp. However, time goes in one direction, so one could only say moment x precedes moment y, but not the other way around.
He talks about other things too, such as the controversy over the possibility of a multi-dimensional time.
These discussions are interesting, because they are very theoretical require stretches of the imagination to perceive. One has to think the "right way" to find the similarities between space and time, and if one thought about it differently, could perceive it altogether differently. Is there truly a correct way to understand space and time? The objective way that space and time are constructed?
