Research in quantum gravity strongly suggests that our world in not fundamentally spatiotemporal, but that spacetime may only emerge in some sense from a non-spatiotemporal structure, as this paper illustrates in the case of causal set theory and loop quantum gravity. This would raise philosophical concerns regarding the empirical coherence and general adequacy of theories in quantum gravity. If it can be established, however, that spacetime emerges in the appropriate circumstances and how all its relevant aspects are explained in fundamental non-spatiotemporal terms, then the challenge is fully met. It is argued that a form of spacetime functionalism offers the most promising template for this project.Space and time, it seems, must be part and parcel of the ontology of any physical theory; of any theory with a credible claim to being a physical theory, that is. After all, physics is the science of the fundamental constitution of the material bodies, their motion in space and time, and indeed of space and time themselves. Usually implicit, Larry Sklar (1983) has given expression to this common intuition:What could possibly constitute a more essential, a more ineliminable, component of our conceptual framework than that ordering of phenomena which places them in space and time? The spatiality and temporality of things is, we feel, the very condition of their existing at all and having other, less primordial, features... We could imagine a world without electric charge, without the atomic constitution of matter, perhaps without matter at all. But a world not in time? A world not spatial? Except to some Platonists, I suppose, such a world seems devoid of real being altogether. (45) The worry here, I take it, goes beyond a merely epistemic concern regarding the inconceivability of a non-spatiotemporal world; rather, it is that such a world would violate some basic necessary condition of physical existence. It is contended that space and time partially ground a material world. The alternative to a spatiotemporal world, it is suggested, is a realm of merely abstract entities. 1 Part of what it means to be 'physically salient is to be in space and time. In other words, what it is to give a physical explanation of aspects of our manifest world is, among other things, to offer a theory of how objects are and move in space and time. * I thank Robin Hendry and Tom Lancaster for their insightful and challenging comments on an earlier draft of this paper.