But what is the evidence that LQG has gravity?
Is there an update, or am I interpreting Han and Zhang wrongly?
Immirzi parameter small means smaller than one. If, as it seems, the Immirzi parameter works like the theta parameter in QCD, it is reasonable to expect that it should be between 0 and 1. But no, you are right, there is not a final word on the convergence of the amplitude. There are some positive signs, for which please allow people like me to be optimistic :-)
atyy said:
Also, isn't it still unknown if LQG is a reasonable quantum theory?
I think that it is pretty acknowledged that LQG is
a theory of quantum gravity at this point, more or less reasonable depending on your taste. On the other hand, nobody would claim that this is
the theory of quantum gravity that Nature has chosen. I agree that this is totally open.
When we say reasonable, satisfactory, viable... all this kind of things, it does not mean that the theory is in a final form, but that is structured enough to provide a framework on which we can work, built on it and do some physically interesting calculation. That's all.
soothsayer said:
I wonder whether the unification of gravity into QFT via graviton follows NECESSARILY from the basic foundation of String Theory, or whether it was added in as a way to nicely unify the forces, and could just as easily be left out. My assumption is the latter, but I don't know enough about string theory (who does??

)
If the unification you want is just to describe gravity by a quantum field theory, that LQG provide a possible theory for this: spinfoam theory, the path integral formulation of LQG, is a QFT with some new feature coming from the fact of being general covariant. But the unification of string theory is more ambitious... but I let the experts of strings talk about it