I'm pretty astounded that I did not hear about this sooner, but in my course on QFT our professor told us that the concept of spin can be used to mean three things:
Mechanical spin (apparently a relativistic effect giving rise to classical spin-orbit coupling)
Magnetic spin (purely quantum mechanical)
Classification of representations of the Lorentz group (the manner in which the particles transforms under Lorentz-transformations)
I take it that these meanings don't generally coincide since they don't seem to do so in the case of the photon: we describe this as a spin-1 particle (3rd meaning), though it has no intrinsic magnetic moment (2nd meaning).
However, despite being swiftly explained in a few words in class, I cannot remember what exactly the first meaning is about. Furthermore I'd like to find out the exact relations between these three meanings. As the case of the photon showed the last two at least don't generally seem to coincide. Can anyone clarify?
Related questions are:
What are some useful ways to imagine the concept of spin as it relates to subatomic particles?
Why do many people say vector fields describe spin-1 particle but omit the spin-0 part?
but the answers there don't make the light go on in my head.