I am familiar with the traditional definition of the position and of the momentum operator in several dimensions. I do not like it, as it uses from the very beginning a concrete Cartesian basis. What I am looking for is a definition in the following form:
Let $V$ be a real vector space. Let $\mu$ be a measure on $V$. Let $L^2(V,{\mathbb C})$ be the Hilbert space of square integrable $L^2$ functions with respect to the measure $\mu$. Denote the Hilbert space scalar product by $\langle \phi | \psi \rangle = \int_V \bar{\phi} \cdot \psi d \mu$. Then the position operator $Q$ is the function $Q\colon L^2 (V, {\mathbb C}) \to L^2 (V, {\mathbb C})$ defined by ... and the momentum operator ...
Question: How can I fill in the dots in above definition? I am interested in an abstract construction from the very beginning.
This means: Using ${\mathbb R}^3$ or a specific basis in $V$ and then abstracting away from the specifics by using morphisms is considered cheating in the context of this question. Using some fundamentally covariant structure on $V$ is fine. Using categorial constructions which later allow for natural isomorphisms between them in the sense of category theory is fine. Using a different Hilbert space is fine.
Goal: I want to understand multidimensionality in QM along the same lines as I understand it in SRT and GRT. I do not want to start with some concrete coordinates, then add Lorentz-transformation or general coordinate transformations - I want to start from the abstract clean mathematical concept of a Minkowski space with a (3,1) index quadratic form or from an abstract differentiable manifold, where the Lorentz-invariance or the general covariance is already encoded into the mathematical object as such.