Ownership is real, but not in the same way a rock, tree, or river is real. Ownership is a social construct: a human agreement, protected by rules, norms, and laws. That distinction matters.
In nature, no invisible ownership field surrounds your car or your house. The universe does not stamp “mine” onto objects. People do that. Societies create ownership so we can manage resources, reduce conflict, and organize responsibility.
Ownership is not a natural thing. It is a human-layer thing.
But that does not make ownership meaningless. Social constructs are rational ideas: indirect descriptions of reality built by human minds. Money, titles, and laws do not float in nature. But once people agree to them, they shape real behavior and real consequences.
Ownership can protect people, organize society, and create stability. It can also create conflict, inequality, and moral responsibility.
All social constructs have roots in nature. Take ownership. Animals defend food, territory, and offspring. Early humans protected food, shelters, and gathering places long before law.
Over time, those survival instincts evolved into social constructs: rational ideas layered over reality to help us organize life. And understanding social constructs deepens your wisdom because they help you see through human agreements.