Abstract

The paper sides with the primitive ontology approach to quantum physics, as exemplified notably in Bohmian mechanics. It argues that the objects of the primitive ontology of quantum physics are structurally individuated by the spatial relations in which they stand. They neither have a primitive thisness (haecceity) nor intrinsic properties (such as mass or charge), but only stand in spatial relations. These relations make it that they are physical objects. Furthermore, in virtue of these relations, they are individuals, being absolutely discernible. Ontic structural realism thus plays a twofold role in the philosophy of quantum physics: it comes in not only at the level of the dynamics (structures of entanglement), but already at the level of the objects (primitive ontology) that instantiate the structures of entanglement, these objects being individuated by spatial relations.

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