(Never) Mind your p's and q's: Von Neumann versus Jordan on the Foundations of Quantum Theory
Anthony Duncan, Michel Janssen

TL;DR
This paper compares Jordan's and von Neumann's foundational approaches to quantum mechanics, highlighting their differing views on formalism, probability rules, and the shift away from classical mechanics analogies.
Contribution
It reconstructs and analyzes the original 1927 papers of Jordan and von Neumann, clarifying their differing perspectives on quantum formalism and the evolution of the theory's foundations.
Findings
Jordan emphasized canonical conjugate variables p and q.
Von Neumann focused on maximal sets of commuting operators.
The formalism gradually distanced itself from classical mechanics.
Abstract
In two papers entitled "On a new foundation [Neue Begr\"undung] of quantum mechanics," Pascual Jordan (1927b,g) presented his version of what came to be known as the Dirac-Jordan statistical transformation theory. As an alternative that avoids the mathematical difficulties facing the approach of Jordan and Paul A. M. Dirac (1927), John von Neumann (1927a) developed the modern Hilbert space formalism of quantum mechanics. In this paper, we focus on Jordan and von Neumann. Central to the formalisms of both are expressions for conditional probabilities of finding some value for one quantity given the value of another. Beyond that Jordan and von Neumann had very different views about the appropriate formulation of problems in quantum mechanics. For Jordan, unable to let go of the analogy to classical mechanics, the solution of such problems required the identication of sets of canonically…
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