Recently, I faced the same confusion as Josh1079 did. But, in contrast to him, I haven’t yet got it after reading this post. Please forgive me for the slow-wittedness.
Let’s say the particles are at rest, so the conserved current is just its time component. For charged scalars I have understood the conserved current to measure charge (probability) density, so when integrated over 3-space one arrives at the total charge.
Now, for the Dirac equation this appears to be essentially the same. Bjorken-Drell II, equation (13.49) says that ##\int \mbox{d}^3x \psi^\dagger \psi## is the total charge. But a pile of literature (Ryder „Quantum Field Theory, Holland „The Quantum Theory of Motion", the website
https://quantummechanics.ucsd.edu/ph130a/130_notes/node488.html and many more) point out that ##\psi^\dagger \psi## is positive definite. I am aware of negative energy solutions and so on, but this does not lift my confusion. I can neither see that particle-antiparticle generation plays a role, since they appear in pairs as it is necessary to conserve the charge.
Does positivity of ##\psi^\dagger \psi## mean that an electron and a positron both have positive current? How then can the current measure charge (probability) density? If it does not measure charge (probability) density, why is its spatial integral the total charge? Or what else does it measure? It is said „probability“ per se, but probability of what? Or is there simply a confusion w.r.t.\ notation? As I understand from the literature ##\psi^\dagger## is the conjugate transpose (synonym for Hermetian transpose) of ##\psi##.
Thank you very much in advance.