An Information-Geometric Reconstruction of Quantum Theory, I: The Abstract Quantum Formalism
Philip Goyal

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how information geometry applied to probability distributions can derive the core structure of quantum theory, linking experimental quantum features to geometric principles.
Contribution
It provides a novel derivation of quantum formalism from information geometric principles, emphasizing the role of gauge invariance and probability geometry.
Findings
Derivation of quantum formalism from information geometry.
Establishment of a natural metric on pure states.
Connection of gauge invariance to complex quantum structure.
Abstract
In this paper and a companion paper, we show how the framework of information geometry, a geometry of discrete probability distributions, can form the basis of a derivation of the quantum formalism. The derivation rests upon a few elementary features of quantum phenomena, such as the statistical nature of measurements, complementarity, and global gauge invariance. It is shown that these features can be traced to experimental observations characteristic of quantum phenomena and to general theoretical principles, and thus can reasonably be taken as a starting point of the derivation. When appropriately formulated within an information geometric framework, these features lead to (i) the abstract quantum formalism for finite-dimensional quantum systems, (ii) the result of Wigner's theorem, and (iii) the fundamental correspondence rules of quantum theory, such as the canonical commutation…
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