(I updated the question, the new last passage is the important one)
If I assume the position of a particle to be represented by an operator $\hat{x}$, and the time evolution to be carried out by the a unitary transformation generated by an operator $\hat{H}$ (called the "Hamiltonian", then I don't have any notion that there has to be something like a "momentum operator".
Now I am trying to come up with a plausibility argument that there must be another, just as fundamental operator, which we call momentum, and which will contribute to any observable that we can define as function of operators, especially $\hat{H}$, in the same sense that in classical mechanics, we naturally see that the state of a system is not described by an element of the configurationspace $q$, but instead by an element of the phase space $(q, p)$.
The explanation I came up with is the following, and I want to know whether it's a good plausibility argument, or a bad one: The Hamiltonian $\hat{H}$ has to be an abitrary operator acting on the Hilbert space that consists of all the non-degenerate eigenstates of the position operator. My idea is that this most general operator $\hat{H}$ could only be represented by a polynomial containing $\hat{X}$ AND $\hat{P}$ with $[\hat{X}, \hat{P}]= i \hbar$.
If I look at the position representation of the Hilbert space, then the hilbert space becomes the space of all square-integrable functions over the domain of the real numbers, and the most general linear map acting on those functions $f(x)$ would be a combination of derivations $\frac{d}{dx}$ ( that would be the momentum operator) and multiplications with $x$ (that would be the position operator).
Does this reasoning hold in general? If the canonical commutation $[\hat{X}, \hat{P}]= i \hbar$ relation holds, does that mean I can represent any hermitian operator by a polynomial of $\hat{X}$ and $\hat{P}$?
If not, is there an other reason there has to be an observable like momentum called momentum with the properties we are used to momentum to have, and that contributes to the generator of time translations $\hat{H}$ in the sense that $\hat{H} = h(\hat{X}, \hat{P})$? I'm aware that we need momentum to reproduce the classical limit of the theory, but that is not the path of reasoning I want to follow. I want to argument from "the other side".
** ** I think I can reformulate the question in the following way, that makes it clearer what I want to ask: Why do we need a conjugate variable for every observable that we look at? In classical mechanics we are originally left with a generalized coordinate $q$. Later on, we add a canonical momentum $p$, because then the movement can be described in the phase space, which is a symplectic manifold, in a very elegant way, with every observable possible being a function on said phase space.
In quantum mechanics I don't see a similar reasoning. We have the postulates of a hilbert space, of operators and of unitary time development, but momentum as an operator and the canonical commutation relation is just introduced to mimic classical mechanics. There is no argument given about the structure of the space of observables, like it is the case with classical mechanics. Is there a reasoning for the plausibility of a conjugate variable in quantum mechanics, that is similar to the reasoning (symplectic manifold, elegant treatment of dynamics) in classical mechanics?