About a decade ago the present author in collaboration with Daniel Grumiller
presented an `unexpected theoretical discovery' of spin one-half fermions with
mass dimension one [JCAP 2005, PRD 2005]. In the decade that followed a
significant number of groups explored intriguing mathematical and physical
properties of the new construct. However, the formalism suffered from two
troubling features, that of non-locality and a subtle violation of Lorentz
symmetry. Here, we trace the origin of both of these issues to a hidden freedom
in the definition of duals of spinors and the associated field adjoints. In the
process, for the first time, we provide a quantum theory of spin one-half
fermions that is free from all the mentioned issues. The interactions of the
new fermions are restricted to dimension-four quartic self interaction, and
also to a dimension-four coupling with the Higgs. A generalised Yukawa coupling
of the new fermions with neutrinos provides an hitherto unsuspected source of
lepton-number violation. The new fermions thus present a first-principle dark
matter partner to Dirac fermions of the standard model of high energy physics
with contrasting mass dimensions -- that of three halves for the latter versus
one of the former without mutating the statistics from fermionic to bosonic.Comment: 41 pages. Much of the discussion made more pedagogic. References
updated and enlarged. Accepted for publication by Advances in Applied
Clifford Algebra