Toolbox for reconstructing quantum theory from rules on information acquisition
Philipp A Hoehn

TL;DR
This paper presents an operational framework for reconstructing quantum theory of qubits from basic rules on information acquisition, highlighting how quantum features emerge from simple informational principles.
Contribution
It introduces a set of four rules that allow a constructive derivation of quantum theory, clarifying the informational and structural foundations of quantum mechanics.
Findings
Derivation of quantum state space as the Bloch ball from informational rules
Identification of two solutions: Bloch ball and disc for qubit and rebit
Reversible time evolution and a quadratic information measure
Abstract
We develop an operational approach for reconstructing the quantum theory of qubit systems from elementary rules on information acquisition. The focus lies on an observer O interrogating a system S with binary questions and S's state is taken as O's `catalogue of knowledge' about S. The mathematical tools of the framework are simple and we attempt to highlight all underlying assumptions. Four rules are imposed, asserting (1) a limit on the amount of information available to O; (2) the mere existence of complementary information; (3) O's total amount of information to be preserved in-between interrogations; and, (4) O's `catalogue of knowledge' to change continuously in time in-between interrogations and every consistent such evolution to be possible. This approach permits a constructive derivation of quantum theory, elucidating how the ensuing independence, complementarity and…
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