Abstract
The quasi-classical spin theory is a modified Hamilton-Jacobi theory for a classical relativistic dipole whose space-time trajectory is coupled to its spin motion. The equations of this quasi-classical theory are almost identical with the second-order (squared) Dirac equation, and, in fact, form a new WKB approximation to the second-order Dirac equation. We quantize this theory by requiring that a classical spinor "wave function" be continuous and single valued, and that it satisfy an eigenvalue equation. We find for a particle in a uniform magnetic field, and in a Coulomb field, that this quasi-classical theory predicts the same energy and angular momentum eigenvalues as the Dirac theory. The quasi-classical theory is invariant under Lorentz transformation, spin rotations, and charge conjugation. The spinor wave functions are form invariant with respect to arbitrary canonical transformations.