Two postulates suffice to single out the full quantum theory in finite dimensions.
Conjugates, Filters and Quantum Mechanics
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The Jordan structure of finite-dimensional quantum theory is derived, in a conspicuously easy way, from a few simple postulates concerning abstract probabilistic models (each defined by a set of basic measurements and a convex set of states). The key assumption is that each system A can be paired with an isomorphic $\textit{conjugate}$ system, $\overline{A}$, by means of a non-signaling bipartite state $\eta_A$ perfectly and uniformly correlating each basic measurement on A with its counterpart on $\overline{A}$. In the case of a quantum-mechanical system associated with a complex Hilbert space $\mathcal H$, the conjugate system is that associated with the conjugate Hilbert space $\overline{\mathcal H}$, and $\eta_A$ corresponds to the standard maximally entangled EPR state on ${\mathcal H} \otimes \overline{\mathcal H}$. A second ingredient is the notion of a $\textit{reversible filter}$, that is, a probabilistically reversible process that independently attenuates the sensitivity of detectors associated with a measurement. In addition to offering more flexibility than most existing reconstructions of finite-dimensional quantum theory, the approach taken here has the advantage of not relying on any form of the "no restriction" hypothesis. That is, it is not assumed that arbitrary effects are physically measurable, nor that arbitrary families of physically measurable effects summing to the unit effect, represent physically accessible observables. An appendix shows how a version of Hardy's "subspace axiom" can replace several assumptions native to this paper, although at the cost of disallowing superselection rules.
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2026 1verdicts
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Two Operational Principles Single Out Quantum Theory
Two postulates suffice to single out the full quantum theory in finite dimensions.