Paraphrasing Griffith's: For some particle of mass m constrained to the x-axis subject to some force $F(x,t)=-∂V/∂x$, the program of classical mechanics is to determine the particle's position at any given time: $x(t)$. This is obtained via Newton's second law $F=ma$. $V(x)$ together with an initial condition determines $x(t)$.
The program of quantum mechanics is to obtain the particle's wave function $\Psi(x,t)$, gotten from solving the Schrôdinger equation:
$$i \hbar \frac{∂\Psi}{∂t} = -\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{∂^2\Psi}{∂x^2} + V\Psi .$$
This is a simple case, but it illustrates the program, and generalizes to multiple particles, 3 dimensions, spin, and magnetism easily.
What is the equivalent program of quantum field theory?
And also, what is the specific representation of the "state" within that program? For example, in quantum mechanics for 1 particle in 3 dimensions, excluding spin, $\Psi: R\times R^3 \rightarrow C $ subject to normalization constraints.
Another property of the previous two programs is that it is immediately clear how the state variables evolve numerically over time (if not calculable).
And for such a solution program, is there an algebraic derivation, the way the Galilean group provides such a derivation for the Schrôdinger equation in quantum mechanics?
I'm aware of second quantization, and that particle number changes, and I've seen various Langrangians, but only for specific cases, and these are unsatisfying compared to the seemingly generic programs of other branches.
An answer dependent on Hamiltonian mechanics, classical field theory, exterior calculus, or abstract algebra is fine.
Edit: This is not a duplicate. I've seen the other question, and it's getting at how QFT differs from single-particle QM generally. I'm asking what is the specific solution program that is just generic enough to encompass all of quantum field theory, and incidentally the mathematical structure of the instances of the state variables in it, and also incidentally whether an algebraic derivation of the program exists.