Entropy said:
... Or am I thinking of something else?
I'd say probably thinking of something else.
That idea I don't recall ever coming up in LQG.
Basic idea of LQG is same as basic idea of classical 1915 General Relativity---that concentrations of energy curve spacetime, so that
the gravitational field is realized as
shape
In classical GR, the shape is determined with perfect mathematical clarity down to the smallest scale (except at locations where the theory fails, which are called singularities). By contrast, when the theory is quantized, shape becomes a fuzzier, less certain idea----a kind of graininess creeps into the ideas of area and volume----and it becomes possible that geometry at very small scales can be qualitatively different from human-scale geometry. Among other things the classical theory's (black hole and big bang)
singularities go away. One loses the ideal mathematical point, which can even be a help because does nature actually have these absolutely perfect infinitely small mathematical points, or is she really rather vaguer about location than that.
The art of quantizing a classical theory seems to involve introducing just enough opportunity for uncertainty, but not too much. One must still be able to define the ideas of area and volume. But operators that measure them must be able to waffle---must have several possible values depending on the quantum state of the geometry.
Frank Wilczek has said that gravity is neither weak nor strong. It is what it is. the question to ask, says he, is not "Why is gravity so weak?" but
instead "Why is the mass of the proton so small?"
He wrote a wonderful series of thee articles about this for Physics Today.
In natural units----with c = hbar = G =1, or at least their values being one----the mass of the proton is one over 13E18
this is 13 quintillion, a big number.
Wilczek explores why it is so large. this is what one must explain, because gravity is what it is. And he arrives at some tentative ideas.
The series of articles is calle "Scaling Mount Planck" and it can be found online.