I am reading through Peskin and Schroeder and I am having some confusion in their derivation of the effective action being the generating functional of 1PI diagrams. In particular, they make a comment on page 381 that says
“… the connected two-point function, that is, the exact propagator.”
On the previous page, however, they express the full two-point function as the sum of both connected and disconnected diagrams. This is where my confusion comes in.
Throughout the book (up to this point), they have used the term “two-point function” and “propagator” interchangeably, and in a very meaningful way. More specifically, in chapter 7 they spend a lot of time discussing the analytic structure of the two-point function and how it has a pole and residue which give the physical mass and field strength renormalization, respectively. They then perform the geometric sum of 1PI diagrams to obtain a separate expression for the two-point correlation function (which they also call the propagator), and they relate these two in order to obtain expressions relating field strength renormalization to the mass shift. The point here being that they seem to define the physical mass by the two-point correlation function, and then use 1PI diagrams to compute it perturbatively through this relation. In chapter 10, when they begin discussion of renormalized perturbation theory, the definition of the mass as being the location of a pole for the two-point correlation function is again used as a renormalization condition.
My confusion is this: is the propagator the full two-point correlation function or just the sum of connected diagrams? In phi 4 Wick’s theorem basically ensures that these are identical because the one-point functions vanished, but in more general theories they need not. Page 380 and 381 seem to distinguish between the two, but then in page 383 they say that the particle masses are zeros of the (Fourier transform of) the inverse of the connected two-point function, not the whole thing (Eqs. 11.89, 11.90, 11.92, and 11.97). I can see how the geometric sum of 1PI diagrams gives the connected correlation function, but not the whole thing, and it seems like the mass is defined by the whole thing. I also don’t see where this definition of the propagator being the connected two-point function comes from.
I apologize if this comes off as a rant more than a question, but I am a bit frustrated as I have been going crazy trying to connect the dots, not entirely sure if I am just missing something or if the language of the textbook is sloppy. This feels like an important distinction, not so much regarding what a “propagator” is, but regarding the relationship between 1PI diagrams and correlation functions (especially when it comes to renormalization conditions). Any and all help on clearing this up would be greatly appreciated