Jonnyb42 said:
I am curious what are other theories of physics at very small scales besides quantum mechanics? Especially those that aren't probabilistic and undeterminitive, (if there are any at all!)
This is a difficult question to answer, because what some consider "another theory", others consider it as a "different interpretation of quantum theory". As you might know, although the *formalism* (that is, the calculations) of quantum mechanics give very good results, many people aren't happy with what one could call the "philosophy" behind it. So people have, over the last 80 years or so, porposed alternative *interpretations* of what the calculations mean. And in doing so, they sometimes added formal elements which aren't part of the original quantum formalism. Probably the most famous such "version" is Bohmian mechanics. Other interpretations limit themselves to re-assigning different meanings to the formal elements of quantum mechanics "as we know it" (and can hence with less doubt be called "interpretations"). The "philosophical" viewpoint of these different interpretations is vastly different, and sometimes "religious wars" are fought over them.
But as far as I know, on all "experimentable" physics, they come out the same *observational* results. That's why, if not just different interpretations (because added formal elements), they are physical theories that are equivalent to quantum mechanics (at least for all practical purposes).
In other words, on the "hard scientific" level, all these theories are empirically indistinguishable, and it is almost a matter of semantics to call them "different theories", although on the philosophical level, they are totally different, for instance on the level of "determinism", or "stochastic". There are deterministic
interpretations of quantum mechanics (Bohmian mechanics for instance). There are "strict" interpretations of the existing formalism (many worlds). There are "shut up and calculate" interpretations (what there "is" is unknowable, we can only calculate what we observe)... For everybody's taste, there must be something. All of these viewpoints have some kinky points, that's probably why none of it stands out clearly above the others... but they all talk about "quantum mechanics" in some or other form, as they are observationally equivalent.
Apart from crackpot websites, I've never seen totally different theories in the same domain of applicability, without them trying to establish some kind of equivalence to quantum mechanics (at least for all practical purposes). And there's a good reason for that: the kwantitative predictions of quantum mechanics are impressively verified by experiment, so there is very little "wiggle room" without being in contradiction with observation.
In other words, no matter all philosophical and even formal difficulties sometimes, quantum mechanics works very well as a scientific theory.