The problem of time is widely regarded as one of the deepest conceptual challenges in quantum gravity. In canonical approaches, the absence of an external time parameter, most notably in the Wheeler–DeWitt equation, has been taken to imply a fundamentally timeless ontology. This paper argues that the inference is not forced by the formalism itself but arises from a specific interpretive move: the elevation of spacetime geometry from a representational structure to an ontological ground. Drawing on Temporal Rate Ontology (TRO), which treats ordered temporal succession as ontologically primitive while interpreting geometric structure as representational, the paper proposes that the problem of time should be dissolved rather than solved. The dissolution strategy is strengthened by attending to how internal-time approaches such as the Page–Wootters mechanism tacitly presuppose the very temporal ordering they seek to derive, and by engaging directly with causal set theory to clarify in what respect TRO advances a genuinely distinct ontological claim. The paper does not offer a new physical theory or technical solution; it provides a diagnostic and interpretive reframing that clarifies which aspects of the problem of time are genuinely physical and which are artifacts of ontological overcommitment. Version 2 (April 2026): Expanded §5.1 (Page–Wootters); added §5.3 (TRO and causal set theory); strengthened §5.5 (Barbour), §6.2 (comparative minimality), and §7 (methodological implications); replaced forthcoming citation with Zenodo DOIs.
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Kouvidis Georgios
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Kouvidis Georgios (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e5c30b03c2939914028e8c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19645479