Tuesday, 17 March 2026

How Realism Became Independence: 3 Newtonian Physics and the Illusion of Intrinsic Properties

If the early modern shift prepared the philosophical ground for independence ontology, it was the triumph of classical physics that made the doctrine appear empirically irresistible. The extraordinary success of the mechanics developed by Isaac Newton seemed to reveal a world composed of objects possessing determinate properties that exist independently of observation. For generations of scientists and philosophers alike, this picture became the default interpretation of what science had discovered about reality.

In retrospect, however, the Newtonian world was not simply discovered. It was interpreted through the metaphysical lens already established by the Cartesian separation between subject and world. The apparent confirmation of intrinsic properties was therefore less a direct deliverance of physics than a convergence between theory and inherited philosophical expectation.

The Classical Image of the World

Newton’s physics describes motion through a precise mathematical framework. Bodies move through space and time according to laws that relate forces, masses, and accelerations. Within this framework, the fundamental quantities that describe a system appear to belong to the objects themselves.

A body has a position.
It has a velocity.
It possesses a mass.
It experiences forces.

These quantities can be measured and used to predict future motion with remarkable accuracy. Because the predictions work so well, it becomes natural to assume that these properties exist in the objects themselves and that measurement merely reveals them.

The classical world therefore appears as a vast assembly of bodies carrying intrinsic attributes that determine their behaviour.

Absolute Space and Time

The Newtonian framework reinforces this picture by introducing an even deeper metaphysical commitment: the existence of absolute space and absolute time.

Space, in Newton’s conception, is not merely a relational structure among objects. It is a fixed and independent stage within which motion occurs. Similarly, time flows uniformly and independently of the events that unfold within it.

This conception suggests that the physical world possesses a determinate structure that exists entirely independently of observation. Bodies move within an objective arena whose geometry is unaffected by the presence of observers or measuring instruments.

Under these assumptions, the idea that physical properties belong intrinsically to objects seems almost unavoidable.

Measurement as Revelation

Within classical mechanics, measurement is naturally interpreted as the discovery of pre-existing facts.

If a particle’s position and velocity determine its future motion, then these quantities must already exist prior to measurement. The measuring device simply records values that the system already possesses.

This interpretation reinforces the independence doctrine. The world appears to be fully specified by the intrinsic properties of objects, and observation merely reveals what is already there.

As the predictive success of classical mechanics accumulated, this image of reality became increasingly persuasive.

The Naturalisation of Independence

By the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Newtonian picture had become the implicit metaphysical background of physics.

Reality appeared to consist of:

  • objects possessing intrinsic properties

  • motion unfolding within absolute space and time

  • measurement revealing pre-existing values

Because the theory worked so well, the philosophical assumptions that accompanied it became almost invisible. Independence ontology was no longer seen as a philosophical inheritance from the Cartesian revolution; it appeared instead as the obvious implication of scientific discovery.

Realism therefore became equated with belief in intrinsic, observer-independent properties.

The Illusion Revealed

Yet the apparent inevitability of this picture rested on a hidden assumption: that the structure of classical mechanics uniquely captures the structure of reality itself.

What Newtonian physics actually demonstrated was something more modest. It provided an extraordinarily successful mathematical framework for predicting motion under a wide range of conditions.

The inference from predictive success to intrinsic-property ontology was a philosophical interpretation layered on top of that success.

As long as classical mechanics remained unchallenged, the interpretation appeared secure. But its stability depended on the continued validity of the classical framework.

When the foundations of physics began to shift in the twentieth century, the intrinsic-property picture would prove far less robust than it had once seemed.

The Coming Disruption

The next stage of the story begins when the classical conception of the physical world encounters phenomena that resist its assumptions.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, the emerging theory of the quantum revealed a domain in which the Newtonian picture of intrinsic properties and independent measurement no longer held.

Physicists such as Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg would soon discover that the classical image of objects carrying determinate properties could not be straightforwardly extended to the microscopic world.

The independence ontology that had seemed so secure under Newtonian mechanics would begin to fracture.

And with it, the apparent identity between realism and intrinsic properties would come into question.

How Realism Became Independence: 2 The Early Modern Shift: Descartes and the Birth of Independence

The identification of realism with ontological independence did not originate within science itself. It emerged from a philosophical transformation in the seventeenth century, when the relationship between the knowing subject and the world was reconceived in radically new terms.

At the centre of this transformation stands René Descartes.

Descartes did not set out to redefine realism. His project was to secure the certainty of knowledge in the face of scepticism. Yet the strategy he adopted reshaped the metaphysical background against which realism would later be understood.

In attempting to guarantee knowledge, Descartes introduced a division that would fundamentally alter the philosophical landscape: the separation of the thinking subject from the extended world.


The Method of Doubt

Descartes begins his philosophical project with a radical procedure: the systematic suspension of belief in anything that could possibly be doubted.

Perception might deceive us.
Dreams might mimic waking experience.
Even mathematical reasoning might be manipulated by a hypothetical deceiver.

By applying this method of doubt, Descartes attempts to strip away all uncertain beliefs in order to discover a foundation for knowledge that cannot be questioned.

What remains is the famous conclusion:

Cogito, ergo sum — I think, therefore I am.

The existence of the thinking subject becomes the first indubitable truth.

But this starting point has an unintended consequence. Knowledge now begins with the certainty of the subject rather than with the world itself.


Two Substances

From this foundation, Descartes reconstructs reality as consisting of two fundamentally distinct kinds of substance:

  • thinking substance (res cogitans), the domain of mind and thought

  • extended substance (res extensa), the domain of physical matter

The thinking subject is characterised by consciousness and awareness.

The physical world, by contrast, is defined entirely in terms of spatial extension and mechanical motion.

This dualistic framework introduces a sharp conceptual separation between the knower and the known. The mind exists in one domain, while the physical world exists in another.

The question of how knowledge reaches the external world now becomes unavoidable.


The New Meaning of Reality

Because the subject and the world have been separated, reality must now be defined in a new way.

The physical world must exist independently of the thinking subject. If it did not, knowledge of the external world would collapse into mere ideas within the mind.

Thus the concept of reality becomes tied to independence from thought.

Reality is what exists outside the sphere of mental activity.

This marks the birth of the independence doctrine.

It is not introduced as a definition of realism itself. Rather, it arises as a solution to a philosophical problem created by the new subject–object division.

But once introduced, the idea quickly becomes embedded in the modern conception of the world.


The Mechanisation of Nature

The Cartesian framework also redefines the nature of physical reality.

In earlier traditions, the world was understood in terms of forms, powers, and relations within a structured order of causes. For Descartes, by contrast, the physical universe becomes a vast mechanical system.

Matter is characterised solely by extension in space.

All physical phenomena are explained through the motion and interaction of extended bodies.

This mechanistic conception reinforces the idea that physical properties belong intrinsically to objects themselves. Position, size, and motion are treated as features of bodies that exist independently of observation.

The world appears as a domain of intrinsically defined objects interacting according to mathematical laws.

Within this framework, independence realism becomes almost unavoidable.


A Philosophical Inheritance

The significance of Descartes’s transformation cannot be overstated.

By separating mind and world, he created the modern philosophical problem of how knowledge relates to an external reality. By defining physical matter as extended substance governed by mechanical laws, he provided a framework that seemed to support the existence of intrinsic properties.

Together, these moves established the conceptual background for modern scientific realism.

Reality came to be understood as what exists independently of observation. Objects were thought to possess intrinsic properties that measurement merely revealed.

Yet this framework did not arise from empirical discovery. It was a philosophical inheritance shaped by the attempt to secure certainty in knowledge.

Later developments in physics would appear to confirm this picture, giving it an aura of scientific inevitability.

But its origins lie not in experimental science, but in a particular metaphysical reconstruction of the relationship between mind and world.


Toward the Classical World

The next stage of the story shows how this philosophical framework became naturalised within science itself.

When the physics of Isaac Newton achieved extraordinary predictive success, the Cartesian conception of reality as a domain of intrinsically defined objects seemed to receive decisive empirical confirmation.

The world described by classical mechanics looked exactly like the kind of world Cartesian metaphysics had prepared us to expect.

And so the independence doctrine became woven into the conceptual fabric of physics.

But the apparent harmony between the two would not last forever.

The classical picture would eventually encounter a theory that refused to fit inside it.

How Realism Became Independence: 1 Before Independence: When Reality Was Not Thought to Stand Apart

Modern discussions of scientific realism often begin from a seemingly obvious assumption: reality exists independently of observation, perception, and conceptual framework. Realism, in this sense, is taken to mean that the world possesses a determinate structure entirely unaffected by the conditions under which it is known.

Because this assumption feels intuitive today, it is often treated as philosophically inevitable. Realism appears to demand independence.

Historically, however, the situation is quite different.

For much of the history of philosophy, reality was not understood as a domain that stands entirely apart from the conditions under which it becomes intelligible. The identification of realism with ontological independence is a comparatively recent development, emerging only with the metaphysical transformations of the early modern period.

To understand how this identification arose, it is useful to begin with the earlier traditions that preceded it.


Reality in Classical Philosophy

In ancient philosophy, the relationship between things and the conditions under which they are known was rarely conceived as a radical separation.

Consider the metaphysics of Aristotle.

For Aristotle, substances possess stable forms that make them the kinds of things they are. But these forms are not isolated intrinsic kernels existing independently of all relations. Substances are intelligible through their organisation within a wider network of relations: causes, powers, activities, and purposes.

A thing’s identity is therefore inseparable from the roles it plays within the structured order of nature.

Knowledge, in this framework, does not require access to a perspective-free reality detached from all conditions of inquiry. Instead, knowledge consists in grasping the form or structure that makes a thing what it is within the broader organisation of the world.

Reality, in other words, is intelligible through structure.

The idea that reality must exist in total independence from the conditions of knowing it would not have appeared as the natural definition of realism.


The Medieval Continuation

Medieval philosophy extended this broadly relational picture.

Scholastic thinkers such as Thomas Aquinas developed detailed accounts of relations as genuine features of reality rather than merely mental constructs.

Relations were not treated as secondary connections between already complete entities. They were understood as ways in which beings are ordered to one another within a structured cosmos.

Knowledge itself was therefore not conceived as the passive recording of intrinsically defined objects. It involved the intellect’s participation in the intelligible structure of the world.

Although medieval philosophy affirmed that the world exists independently of individual minds, it did not treat independence from all conditions of intelligibility as the defining feature of reality.

Reality remained fundamentally structured and relational.


The Absence of the Modern Problem

Because these earlier traditions did not begin from a radical separation between subject and world, they also did not confront the modern philosophical problem of how knowledge can reach a reality that supposedly exists entirely outside the conditions of knowing.

The very formulation of that problem presupposes a metaphysical picture in which the knowing subject stands on one side and a fully self-contained world stands on the other.

That picture had not yet taken shape.

Instead, reality and intelligibility were understood as mutually articulated: the world possessed an intelligible order, and knowledge consisted in grasping that order.

This view left ample room for realism. The world was not dependent on human thought, nor was it reducible to perception. But realism did not require the claim that reality existed in complete independence from the relational structures through which it becomes intelligible.


The Historical Turning Point

The identification of realism with ontological independence emerges much later, in the philosophical transformations of the seventeenth century.

It is in the work of René Descartes that we find the decisive reconfiguration. Descartes sharply separates the thinking subject from the extended world, introducing a new metaphysical picture in which the mind and the physical universe occupy fundamentally distinct domains.

Once this division is established, the question of how knowledge reaches an external reality becomes unavoidable.

From that point onward, independence begins to function as the defining feature of realism. Reality must be what exists outside the sphere of thought.

This shift marks the beginning of the modern conception of realism.


A Contingent Beginning

Seen in historical perspective, the independence doctrine no longer appears inevitable.

It is the product of a particular philosophical transformation rather than the natural meaning of realism itself.

For earlier traditions, reality was already understood as structured and intelligible through relations. The world was real not because it existed outside all conditions of knowledge, but because its structure constrained and guided inquiry.

The modern equation of realism with independence therefore represents a departure from earlier metaphysical frameworks.

Understanding how this shift occurred is essential for evaluating whether the doctrine it produced remains necessary today.

The next stage of the story begins with the philosophical revolution that made independence appear indispensable.

And that revolution begins with Descartes.

Physics After Intrinsic Properties

For much of its history, physics has been interpreted through a simple metaphysical image. The world was thought to consist of objects possessing intrinsic properties—position, momentum, mass, charge—existing independently of observation. Measurement, on this view, merely revealed what was already there.

This image was so deeply embedded in the conceptual foundations of science that it often passed unnoticed. It appeared simply as common sense: reality was what existed regardless of how we perceived it.

Yet the development of modern physics has gradually eroded this assumption.

Quantum theory introduced a formal structure in which the classical picture of intrinsic properties becomes difficult to sustain. Observables cannot generally be assigned definite values simultaneously. More strikingly, results such as the Kochen–Specker theorem show that it is impossible to assign consistent, context-independent values to all observables in a quantum system.

In other words, the idea that physical systems carry intrinsic properties—properties that belong to them independently of the circumstances of measurement—cannot be maintained without altering the theory.

This discovery does not imply that reality depends on human observers. Nor does it imply that physics collapses into subjectivity.

What it implies is something subtler.

The classical model of reality as a collection of objects with intrinsic attributes is not supported by the structure of our best physical theory.

Instead, quantum mechanics reveals a world organised by constraints on possible relations. Observable outcomes are not arbitrary, but they arise within structured contexts defined by compatibility relations among measurements and by the formal symmetries of the theory.

What remains stable across these contexts is not a catalogue of intrinsic properties, but a network of structural relations.

Physics, in practice, has long operated in this way. Modern theoretical frameworks are built around symmetries, invariants, conservation laws, and transformation groups. These are not descriptions of intrinsic attributes possessed by isolated objects. They are descriptions of relational structure.

The philosophical lesson is therefore not that physics has failed to describe reality.

It is that the reality described by physics is not the one classical metaphysics expected.

Scientific realism can survive this shift. Indeed, it becomes clearer once the classical image is set aside. The success of science no longer requires that theories reveal a domain of observer-independent intrinsic properties. It requires only that the world possesses stable structural relations that constrain our interactions with it.

Those constraints are precisely what scientific theories capture.

Seen in this light, the trajectory of modern physics appears less like a crisis and more like a clarification. The deeper science probes, the less the world resembles a collection of isolated objects, and the more it appears as a structured field of relations.

Intrinsic properties recede.

Structure remains.

And it is this structure—stable, constraining, and empirically accessible—that science progressively reveals.

Physics does not end when intrinsic properties disappear.

It simply begins to understand more clearly what it has been describing all along.

From Structural Realism to Relational Ontology: Completing the Transformation of Scientific Realism

1. The Limits of Structural Realism

The preceding arguments have established two conclusions.

First, the classical assumption that reality consists of intrinsic properties existing independently of observation cannot be sustained. The independence ontology inherited from classical metaphysics fails both conceptually and empirically.

Second, scientific realism does not require this assumption. What the success of science actually supports is the existence of stable structural relations that constrain scientific inquiry.

This leads naturally to structural realism: the view that science succeeds because it captures invariant relational structures in the world.

Structural realism preserves objectivity without relying on intrinsic properties.

However, it leaves an important question unresolved.

If reality consists of structure, what kind of structure is it?


2. The Problem of “Structure Without Relation”

Structural realism is often formulated cautiously. It commits to relational structure while remaining agnostic about the ultimate nature of the entities involved.

But this neutrality creates a tension.

Structure cannot exist without relations, and relations cannot exist without relata. Yet if the relata are conceived as intrinsically defined entities, the theory risks reintroducing the very intrinsic-property ontology it sought to avoid.

The result is an unresolved ambiguity: structure is affirmed, but the ontological status of the relations that constitute it remains unclear.

What is required is a framework in which relational structure is not merely a descriptive feature of reality, but its fundamental mode of articulation.


3. The Relational Turn

A relational ontology begins from a simple insight:

Relations are not secondary features connecting independently defined entities. They are the primary conditions under which entities can be distinguished at all.

Under this view, systems do not first exist and then enter into relations. Rather, systems are identifiable only through the relational structures in which they participate.

What appears as an individual object is a stabilised node within a network of relations.

Properties are therefore not intrinsic attributes carried by isolated systems. They are features that arise within structured interactions.

This view aligns naturally with the lessons of quantum contextuality. Observable values emerge within measurement contexts defined by relations among observables and experimental configurations.


4. Structure as Constraint

The relational perspective clarifies the sense in which structural realism remains realist.

Reality is not defined as what exists independently of all observation. Instead, reality is what constrains observation through stable relational structure.

Scientific inquiry succeeds because these structures impose limits on what can occur.

Experimental outcomes are not arbitrary. They are restricted by invariant relations that persist across contexts.

These constraints are precisely what scientific theories capture through mathematical structure.

In this sense, the structural stability revealed by science reflects genuine features of the world.


5. Reinterpreting Objectivity

Once structure is understood relationally, objectivity can be reinterpreted.

Objectivity does not require a perspective-free view from nowhere. It requires that relations remain stable across transformations of perspective.

When experimental results persist across observers, instruments, and coordinate systems, the stability of those relations indicates structural features of the world.

Objectivity is therefore grounded in invariance.

This principle already operates at the core of modern physics, where symmetry and transformation invariance play foundational roles.

The relational interpretation simply makes explicit the ontological implications of this practice.


6. The Transformation of Realism

With these elements in place, scientific realism can be reformulated.

Realism becomes the commitment that:

  • the world exhibits stable relational structures,

  • these structures constrain scientific inquiry,

  • and scientific theories succeed by capturing aspects of this relational structure.

Intrinsic, observer-independent properties are no longer required.

What remains is a realist commitment to structural constraint.

This transformation preserves the strengths of realism while removing the metaphysical assumptions that quantum theory has rendered problematic.


7. A Relational Ontology of Science

Within this framework, the success of science becomes intelligible without invoking independence ontology.

Scientific theories do not reveal a world of isolated objects possessing intrinsic properties. They articulate relational structures governing possible interactions.

Entities appear within these structures as stabilised relational configurations.

Measurements are not passive revelations of intrinsic attributes. They are interactions through which relational structures are instantiated and constrained.

Reality is therefore neither subjective nor intrinsically detached from observation. It is relationally structured and empirically constrained.


8. The Completion of the Argument

The trajectory of the argument can now be seen clearly.

First, the independence ontology inherited from classical physics proved conceptually unstable.

Second, the No Miracles Argument failed to justify the inference from empirical success to ontological independence.

Third, structural realism emerged as a viable reconstruction of scientific realism.

Fourth, quantum contextuality demonstrated the untenability of intrinsic property assignments.

These developments collectively point toward a relational articulation of reality.

Relational ontology does not overturn scientific realism.

It completes its transformation.


9. The New Baseline

The classical image of science sought a world of intrinsic objects existing independently of all observation.

Modern physics reveals a different picture.

The world manifests itself through stable relational structures that constrain possible interactions and measurements.

Scientific theories succeed because they capture aspects of this relational structure.

The task of ontology is therefore not to describe a realm of intrinsically defined entities, but to understand the relational articulation through which structure becomes empirically accessible.

In this sense, realism remains intact.

What changes is the conception of what reality is.

Reality is not intrinsic.

Reality is relationally structured.

Quantum Contextuality and the End of Intrinsic Properties

1. The Classical Picture

Classical physics rests on a simple ontological assumption: physical systems possess intrinsic properties.

A particle has a position.
A magnet has a definite orientation.
A body has a determinate velocity.

Measurements, in this picture, reveal what is already there. The act of observation may disturb a system, but it does not determine its fundamental properties. Those properties exist independently of measurement.

This assumption fits naturally with the broader metaphysical doctrine that reality exists independently of observation. If systems possess intrinsic properties, then observation merely discovers them.

For centuries, this picture provided the conceptual background of physics.

Quantum theory challenges it.


2. The Quantum Problem

In quantum mechanics, observables are represented by operators, and many of these operators do not commute. This means that certain quantities cannot be simultaneously assigned definite values in a straightforward way.

Initially, this might appear to be merely a limitation of measurement. Perhaps the properties are still there, but the theory prevents us from accessing them simultaneously.

However, deeper analysis shows that the problem is not merely epistemic.

The difficulty is ontological.


3. The Idea of Non-Contextual Properties

To preserve the classical intuition, one might assume that physical systems still possess definite properties prior to measurement.

Under this view:

  • each observable has a definite value,

  • measurement simply reveals that value,

  • the value does not depend on which other measurements are performed.

This assumption is known as non-contextuality.

Non-contextuality means that the value of a property belongs to the system itself, independently of the experimental context used to measure it.

In other words, the property is intrinsic.


4. The Kochen–Specker Result

Quantum theory does not permit this assumption.

The Kochen–Specker theorem demonstrates that, for quantum systems of dimension three or higher, it is impossible to assign definite values to all observables in a way that is both consistent with the structure of the theory and independent of measurement context.

The implication is profound.

No global assignment of intrinsic properties can reproduce the predictions of quantum mechanics while preserving non-contextuality.

The value of an observable cannot be thought of as belonging to the system independently of how it is measured.


5. What Contextuality Means

Contextuality does not imply that measurement creates reality out of nothing, nor that physical systems depend on human minds.

Instead, it reveals something more subtle.

The value that an observable takes is defined within a measurement context — that is, within a structured arrangement of compatible observables and experimental conditions.

Properties are therefore not intrinsic features that exist in isolation. They are features that arise within relational structures.

What quantum mechanics forbids is the classical assumption that properties belong to systems independently of those structures.


6. The Collapse of Intrinsic Property Ontology

This result strikes directly at the heart of independence ontology.

If systems possessed intrinsic properties in the classical sense, then it should be possible to assign those properties consistently and independently of measurement context.

Contextuality shows that this cannot be done.

The conclusion is unavoidable:

The intrinsic property model inherited from classical physics does not survive quantum theory.

Properties cannot be understood as context-free features of isolated systems.


7. Why Physics Did Not Immediately Abandon Intrinsic Properties

Despite the force of contextuality results, many interpretations of quantum mechanics attempt to preserve intrinsic properties by modifying the ontology.

Examples include:

  • hidden-variable theories,

  • collapse models,

  • branching-world interpretations.

These approaches introduce additional metaphysical structures designed to restore classical intuitions about definiteness.

But the mathematical structure of quantum theory itself does not require intrinsic properties.

What the theory requires is consistency with its relational structure.


8. Structural Consequences

Once intrinsic properties are abandoned, a different picture emerges.

Quantum systems are not best understood as carriers of context-free attributes.

They are better understood as participants in structured relational networks defined by:

  • compatibility relations among observables,

  • symmetry principles,

  • invariant probabilistic constraints.

What remains stable across contexts is not intrinsic property values but structural relations.

This is precisely the domain in which scientific objectivity continues to operate.


9. The Philosophical Shift

The classical question asked:

What intrinsic properties does a system possess?

Quantum theory forces a different question:

What structural relations constrain the outcomes of possible measurements?

This shift replaces an ontology of isolated properties with an ontology of structured relations.

The transition is not a retreat from realism. It is an adjustment of realism to the structure of modern physics.


10. The Road Forward

Quantum contextuality does not imply that reality dissolves into subjective observation.

What it shows is that reality cannot be understood as a collection of intrinsic properties existing independently of relational structure.

Instead, the world presents itself through stable structural constraints governing possible interactions and measurements.

Intrinsic properties disappear.

Structure remains.

And it is this structure that scientific theories successfully capture.

Monday, 16 March 2026

The Positive Structural Alternative: Structural Realism Without Ontological Independence

1. Core Thesis

Reality is not defined as what exists independently of observation.
Rather:

Reality is the structured domain that constrains scientific inquiry through invariant relations.

This shifts the ontological focus from intrinsic entities to structural constraint.

The commitment is no longer to observer-independent objects with fully definite properties, but to stable relational structure that persists across contexts.


2. Ontological Commitments

The positive structural alternative commits to three claims:

(A) Structural Stability

The world exhibits stable relational patterns that remain invariant across different experimental and theoretical frameworks.

These invariances are not artefacts of perspective. They constrain it.


(B) Empirical Constraint

Scientific theories succeed because they are constrained by these stable structures.

Theories do not float freely. Their predictive power arises from alignment with invariant relational features of the world.


(C) Intersubjective Robustness

Objectivity is grounded in reproducibility and transformation-invariance.

When results persist across observers, instruments, and coordinate systems, we attribute this stability to the world’s structure — not to intrinsic independence from observation.


3. What Is Rejected

The structural alternative explicitly rejects:

  • The requirement that reality consist of intrinsic, context-free properties.

  • The assumption that measurement merely reveals pre-existing definite values.

  • The idea that objectivity requires elimination of theoretical framing.

  • The claim that empirical success entails ontological independence.

These are not necessary for realism.


4. Ontological Reframing

Under structural realism:

  • Objects are nodes within relational structures.

  • Properties are defined within systems of relations.

  • Measurement is an interaction within structured contexts.

  • Reality is not outside observation; it is the structured field that makes observation possible and constrained.

This does not imply that reality depends on individual minds.

It implies that reality is not meaningfully describable apart from relational structure.


5. Why This Is Stronger

This framework has several advantages:

• It aligns with quantum theory

Quantum formalism is inherently structural: Hilbert spaces, operators, symmetry groups, invariance principles.

• It avoids interpretative inflation

No need to posit hidden variables, collapse mechanisms, or ontological branching merely to preserve classical intrinsic definiteness.

• It preserves realism

The world still constrains theory. Success is not accidental. Structure is real.

• It grounds objectivity correctly

Objectivity becomes invariance under transformation — not independence from observation.


6. Minimal Ontology, Maximum Constraint

The structural alternative is deliberately minimal.

It does not claim:

  • What the ultimate furniture of reality is.

  • Whether structure is fundamental or emergent.

  • Whether systems are reducible to deeper layers.

It claims only this:

Whatever reality ultimately consists of, it manifests as stable relational structure that constrains scientific theory.

That is enough for realism.

And it is sufficient for science.


7. The Philosophical Shift

The classical view asked:

What exists independently of us?

The structural view asks:

What structural invariances constrain our descriptions?

This shift transforms ontology from a theory of isolated existence into a theory of constraint and relation.

It replaces metaphysical independence with structural articulation.


8. Final Formulation

A concise statement of the positive alternative:

Scientific realism is the commitment that the world possesses stable, transformation-invariant structural relations that constrain and explain the success of scientific theories. Ontological independence is not required for this commitment.

That is structural realism in its cleanest form.

After Independence: A Manifesto for Structural Realism

For centuries, scientific realism has been anchored to a simple idea: reality exists independently of observation, measurement, and theoretical description. This independence ontology has functioned as the metaphysical guarantee of objectivity. It promised that science discovers how the world is, regardless of who observes it or how it is described.

That promise is no longer philosophically secure.

Not because science has failed. On the contrary — science has succeeded spectacularly. But the interpretation of that success has been constrained by an assumption that modern physics does not require.

The independence ontology was inherited from classical metaphysics. It aligned naturally with a world picture in which objects possessed intrinsic properties, measurements merely revealed pre-existing facts, and theoretical description tracked a fully determinate structure independent of observation.

Quantum theory disrupts that picture.

The formal structure of modern physics exhibits contextuality, relational constraints, non-commuting observables, and entanglement. It does not naturally support the assumption that systems possess globally definite, observer-independent intrinsic properties. Attempts to preserve that assumption require interpretative additions not mandated by the mathematics itself.

At the same time, the primary philosophical defence of independence realism — the No Miracles Argument — fails to establish its conclusion. Empirical success does not logically entail ontological independence. Multiple incompatible ontologies can account for the same predictive achievements. Success alone underdetermines metaphysics.

The combined result is clear:

Scientific realism does not require ontological independence.

And quantum theory does not support it.


What Remains

Removing independence does not remove realism.

Realism survives in a revised form — one that recognises that objectivity in physics is grounded not in perspective-free existence, but in structural invariance.

Science succeeds because it captures stable relations:

  • symmetry principles

  • invariant transformations

  • reproducible experimental outcomes

  • mathematically coherent structures

These features do not depend on intrinsic, observer-independent properties. They depend on relational stability within structured systems of inquiry.

Objectivity, in this view, is not achieved by eliminating perspective. It is achieved by identifying structures that remain invariant across perspectives.

Reality is not defined as what lies outside all construal.
Reality is what constrains construal through stable structural relations.

This shift transforms scientific realism without abandoning it.


The Transformation

The future of realism lies not in defending the classical independence assumption, but in refining the concept of reality itself.

Realism can be understood as commitment to:

  • the stability of structural relations,

  • the constraint of theory by the world,

  • the intersubjective robustness of empirical results,

  • and the explanatory power of invariant formal structure.

What falls away is the metaphysical requirement that reality consist of fully definite, observer-independent intrinsic properties existing outside all observational frameworks.

Quantum theory does not undermine science.

It reveals that classical independence ontology is not required for science to function — and may in fact obscure how science actually works.


A New Baseline

We do not need to choose between realism and anti-realism.

We need to distinguish between:

  • realism as commitment to structured objectivity, and

  • realism as commitment to classical metaphysical independence.

The second is optional.

The first is sufficient.

Modern physics supports structure.
It does not require metaphysical isolation.

The task now is not to defend independence at all costs, but to allow ontology to follow the structure of our best theories.

That is not a retreat from realism.

It is its maturation.

From Independence to Structure: The Transformation of Scientific Realism Under Quantum Pressure

Abstract

Scientific realism has traditionally been grounded in the assumption that reality exists independently of observation and theoretical description. This paper argues that this independence ontology is neither logically required by realism nor supported by the best current physical theory. First, the independence assumption is shown to be structurally unstable. Second, the No Miracles Argument — the primary justification for realism — is shown to fail as an inference from empirical success to ontological independence. Third, scientific realism is reconstructed without independence, as a commitment to structural invariance and empirical constraint. The result is not the abandonment of realism, but its transformation in response to quantum theory.


I. The Independence Assumption

The dominant philosophical background of much scientific interpretation can be stated simply:

Reality exists independently of observation, measurement, and theoretical framework.

This claim appears to secure objectivity. However, it introduces a strong metaphysical thesis: that reality consists of observer-independent intrinsic properties.

When made explicit, this thesis encounters structural tension.

All scientific knowledge arises through:

  • measurement,

  • experimental arrangement,

  • mathematical modelling,

  • theoretical framing.

Thus every claim about reality is produced within structured observational conditions.

The independence ontology attempts to describe a standpoint that is, in principle, outside all such conditions.

This creates conceptual instability: the doctrine relies on what it denies.


II. The Failure of the No Miracles Argument

The No Miracles Argument claims that:

  • Scientific theories are extraordinarily successful.

  • Their success would be miraculous unless they were approximately true.

  • Therefore, the best explanation of success is realism.

However, this inference is invalid.

Empirical success entails alignment between theory and observation.
It does not entail ontological independence.

Multiple ontologies can explain the same empirical success. Quantum theory itself demonstrates this underdetermination: distinct interpretations yield identical predictions.

Therefore, empirical success does not uniquely support independence realism.

The explanatory step from success to observer-independent ontology requires an additional philosophical premise — not supplied by physics.


III. Quantum Theory as Structural Pressure

Quantum mechanics intensifies the difficulty for independence realism.

The theory exhibits:

  • contextuality,

  • non-commuting observables,

  • entanglement,

  • resistance to global non-contextual property assignment.

These structural features conflict with classical intrinsic definiteness.

To preserve independence realism, one must introduce:

  • nonlocal hidden variables,

  • dynamical collapse mechanisms,

  • ontological branching,

  • or reinterpretations of probability.

These strategies modify metaphysics to protect the independence assumption.

But the formal structure of the theory does not require intrinsic observer-independent definiteness.

Thus quantum theory does not support classical independence ontology.


IV. Reconstructing Realism Without Independence

If independence is not required, realism can be reformulated.

Scientific realism need not claim that reality consists of intrinsic, perspective-free properties.

Instead, it can be understood as commitment to:

  • structural stability,

  • invariant relations,

  • explanatory coherence,

  • and intersubjective robustness of empirical results.

On this view:

Reality is what constrains theory through stable structural relations.

Objectivity becomes invariance under transformation, reproducibility of results, and formal consistency — not absence of perspective.

This structural realism preserves scientific integrity without committing to metaphysical independence.


V. The Transformation of Realism

Under this reconstruction:

  • Empirical success still matters.

  • Theories still aim at truth.

  • The world still constrains inquiry.

  • Science remains objective.

What changes is the metaphysical framing.

Reality is no longer conceived as a domain of intrinsic, observer-independent properties existing outside all theoretical structure.

Instead, reality is understood as structurally articulated and accessible through invariant relations.

Quantum theory does not undermine realism.

It undermines independence ontology.

Realism survives — but only if it relinquishes its classical metaphysical foundation.


VI. The Trilogy Completed

The argument now forms a coherent sequence:

1. Independence Assumption

Shows that classical ontology is structurally unstable.

2. No Miracles Argument

Shows that empirical success does not justify independence.

3. Structural Reconstruction

Shows that realism can survive without independence.

Together, these steps demonstrate that scientific realism does not require ontological independence, and that modern physics provides strong motivation for revising that assumption.

The result is not anti-realism.

It is a transformation of realism.


Conclusion

The independence ontology once served as a powerful metaphysical backdrop for classical physics. However, neither logical inference nor quantum theory compels its acceptance. Empirical success does not entail ontological independence, and the No Miracles Argument fails to establish that inference.

Scientific realism can and should be reconstructed in structural terms — grounded in invariance, relational stability, and empirical constraint rather than intrinsic, observer-independent properties.

Under this reconstruction, realism remains intact. What falls away is the unnecessary metaphysical commitment that reality must exist in complete independence from observation and description.

Quantum theory does not threaten realism.

It invites its refinement.

Reconstructing Scientific Realism Without Ontological Independence

Abstract

Scientific realism is typically understood as the view that successful scientific theories describe a mind-independent reality. This paper argues that ontological independence — understood as the claim that reality exists wholly independently of observation, measurement, and theoretical framework — is not required for realism. Empirical success, explanatory power, and theoretical stability can be preserved without committing to intrinsic, observer-independent properties. By decoupling realism from independence ontology, we obtain a structurally more coherent account of modern physics, particularly in light of quantum theory. Scientific realism can therefore be reconstructed as a commitment to structured invariance and intersubjective stability rather than metaphysical independence.


1. The Classical Form of Scientific Realism

Traditional scientific realism includes three central claims:

  1. Mature scientific theories are approximately true.

  2. The unobservable entities they posit (e.g., electrons, fields) exist.

  3. These entities exist independently of observation and description.

The third claim — ontological independence — is often treated as essential. It is thought to guarantee objectivity and to explain the success of science.

However, this linkage is not logically necessary.

Realism can be separated from independence.


2. What Realism Really Requires

At minimum, scientific realism requires:

  • Commitment to the stability of theoretical structure.

  • Commitment to the explanatory power of scientific models.

  • Commitment to the intersubjective robustness of empirical results.

None of these commitments logically entail that reality consists of intrinsic, observer-independent properties.

Realism can instead be understood as the view that:

Scientific theories successfully capture stable structural relations in the world.

This structural commitment does not require classical independence ontology.


3. Independence Is Stronger Than Realism Requires

Ontological independence asserts that reality exists entirely outside observation, measurement, and theoretical framing.

But realism only requires that:

  • The world constrains scientific theories.

  • Successful theories are not arbitrary constructions.

  • There are objective regularities that remain stable across contexts.

These requirements can be satisfied even if:

  • Properties are context-dependent,

  • Measurement participates in phenomena,

  • Reality is structurally relational.

Thus independence is an additional metaphysical layer, not a logical component of realism itself.


4. Structural Realism as a Reconstruction

One way to reconstruct realism without independence is to focus on structure rather than intrinsic entities.

Scientific theories succeed because they:

  • Identify invariant relations,

  • Capture symmetry principles,

  • Encode stable mathematical structures,

  • Predict consistent patterns across experiments.

On this view, realism is a commitment to the reality of stable structure, not to observer-independent intrinsic properties.

The ontological commitment shifts from:

Objects with intrinsic properties independent of observation,

to:

Structurally stable relational patterns that constrain observation.

This preserves realism while removing the independence requirement.


5. Compatibility with Quantum Theory

Quantum mechanics provides strong motivation for this reconstruction.

The theory exhibits:

  • Contextuality of measurement outcomes,

  • Non-commuting observables,

  • Entanglement,

  • Structural resistance to global non-contextual value assignment.

These features challenge classical intrinsic-property realism.

However, quantum theory is extraordinarily successful empirically.

Therefore:

If realism were inseparable from classical independence, quantum theory would undermine realism.

But if realism is redefined as commitment to stable structural relations, quantum theory becomes fully compatible with it.

Indeed, the mathematical formalism itself is deeply structural.

Thus realism survives — but in revised form.


6. Objectivity Without Independence

Objectivity need not mean observer-independence in the metaphysical sense.

Instead, objectivity can mean:

  • Stability of results across different observers,

  • Reproducibility of experiments,

  • Invariance under transformations,

  • Formal consistency across contexts.

These forms of objectivity are fully compatible with relational or contextual structures.

Independence ontology mistakenly equates objectivity with absence of structure.

Modern physics shows that objectivity can arise within structured frameworks.


7. Why This Reconstruction Is Stronger

By decoupling realism from ontological independence, we gain several advantages:

  1. We avoid unnecessary metaphysical commitments.

  2. We align realism more closely with the actual structure of scientific theories.

  3. We reduce interpretative tension in quantum mechanics.

  4. We preserve the explanatory integrity of science without positing inaccessible metaphysical standpoints.

Realism becomes a commitment to the stability and constraint of theory by the world — not a claim about intrinsic, perspective-free existence.

This is a thinner, but stronger, position.


8. Conclusion

Scientific realism does not require ontological independence.

The independence assumption is an additional metaphysical thesis that has historically accompanied realism, but it is not logically necessary for it.

Realism can be reconstructed as a commitment to:

  • structural stability,

  • empirical constraint,

  • explanatory coherence,

  • and intersubjective invariance.

This reconstruction preserves the strengths of scientific realism while removing the ontological commitments that generate tension in modern physics.

Far from undermining realism, quantum theory invites its refinement.

The future of realism does not lie in defending classical independence.

It lies in recognising that objectivity and reality can be grounded in structure rather than intrinsic metaphysical isolation.