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According to reference [1] in Does the act of storing information (not its erasure) locally increase entropy in Maxwell's demon's memory?, information-theoretic entropy and thermodynamic entropy may not be the same. My question comes in 2 parts: i) If they are not the same, then which is more fundamental and ii) must both still be attributed to an observable?

Qmechanic
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PrawwarP
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  • on the subjectivity of thermodynamic entropy see https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/193677/ and https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/395813/ – hyportnex Dec 05 '20 at 17:13
  • What do you mean by "fundamental"? 2. Since entropy is a property of mixed states but not of pure states, it is not an "observable" in the technical meaning of the word in either classical or quantum mechanics. What do you mean here by these entropies being "attributed" to an observable?
  • – ACuriousMind Dec 06 '20 at 00:59