peter8 said:
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1.- PL is the minimum length possible. This is, there is no length under PL.
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let's think what this could mean.
in science things must have an operational meaning. to say there is a length one must imagine a measurement (of some length)
in quantum physics the measurements correspond to operators on some hilbertspace. there is nothing more basic than the spectrum of these operators.
to say that
there is no length under PL means that no matter what length observable, or operator, you construct in whatever experiment, that this operator will have a discrete spectrum
it will have a smallest non-zero eigenvalue, and this (we will say) is no smaller than PL.
This is the physical meaning of saying there exists no length smaller----namely: that
you cannot measure and get a smaller reading
we know space empirically as relationships between things we observe
and beyond the smallest we can measure----the question of what space really IS

----I am not sure the question is even meaningful.
As you know, in LQG it is found that the spectrum of the area and volume operators is discrete. There is a smallest positive area, and a smallest positive volume, which it is possible to measure. This is what one expects of a quantum theory of spacetime. BUT IT COULD BE WRONG
Maybe it will turn out that one can in principle measure infinitely small volumes and areas! LQG is only preliminary, it is not yet tested.
For me, the unsureness is why it is entertaining. Have a look at Smolin's recent article---it has an interesting list of solved problems, unsolved problems, and near-term testing prospects, and an FAQ. I think you might like it if you have not alread read it.
Smolin
Invitation to Loop Quantum Gravity
http://arxiv.org/hep-th/0408048