In order to figure out why quantum physics needs the complex Hilbert space,
many attempts have been made to distinguish the C*-algebras and von Neumann
algebras in more general classes of abstractly defined Jordan algebras (JB- and
JBW-algebras). One particularly important distinguishing property was
identified by Alfsen and Shultz and is the existence of a dynamical
correspondence. It reproduces the dual role of the selfadjoint operators as
observables and generators of dynamical groups in quantum mechanics. In the
paper, this concept is extended to another class of nonassociative algebras,
arising from recent studies of the quantum logics with a conditional
probability calculus and particularly of those that rule out third-order
interference. The conditional probability calculus is a mathematical model of
the Lueders-von Neumann quantum measurement process, and third-order
interference is a property of the conditional probabilities which was
discovered by R. Sorkin in 1994 and which is ruled out by quantum mechanics. It
is shown then that the postulates that a dynamical correspondence exists and
that the square of any algebra element is positive still characterize, in the
class considered, those algebras that emerge from the selfadjoint parts of
C*-algebras equipped with the Jordan product. Within this class, the two
postulates thus result in ordinary quantum mechanics using the complex Hilbert
space or, vice versa, a genuine generalization of quantum theory must omit at
least one of them.Comment: 11 pages in Foundations of Physics 201