\frac{dx^i}{dt}=c\alpha^i
This is really weird. Maybe the canonical/Heisenberg formulation has been stretched too far?
Indeed you are right! Since the eigenvalues of \alpha_{i} are \pm 1, we are faced with a paradox. That is the absolute value of the velocity of a relativistic electron always equals the velocity of light! Also, since the \alpha_{i} do not commute with each other, the components of the velocity would not be simultaneously measurable! Clearly this nonsense (in cotradiction with the Ehrenfest theorem) would not give the classical result for the mean values.
To have a "consistent" relativistic QM, i.e., relativistic one-electron theory, we must necessarily define all physical quantities by EVEN operators. That is
<br />
\hat{O} \rightarrow [\hat{O}] = \frac{1}{2} (\hat{O} + \Omega \hat{O} \Omega )<br />
where the Hermitian and unitary sign operator is defined ( in the momentum representation) by
<br />
\Omega = \frac{\alpha_{i}p_{i} + m \beta}{E_{p}}<br />
Note that [H_{D}] = H_{D} and [\hat{p}_{i}] = \hat{p}_{i}, but
<br />
[\alpha_{i}] = \hat{p}_{i} \frac{\Omega}{E_{p}}<br />
Thus
<br />
[\frac{d \hat{x}_{i}}{dt}] = \frac{\hat{p}_{i}}{E_{p}} \Omega<br />
and the velocity is p_{i}/E_{p} for positive and -p_{i}/E_{p} for negative free particle solutions. Notice that the classical picture corresponds only to the positive solutions. One could carry on to bring about the connection with Zitterbewegung motion arround the classical trajectory by solving the EOM in the Hiesenberg representation.
regards
sam