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Planck and Millikan demonstrated the quantum nature of light and charge. Particles other than the electron are a bit more difficult to demonstrate directly, but the whole of chemistry depends on the discrete and invariant nature of atoms.
Does that imply that spacetime should also have a discrete nature when examined closely enough?
But what happens if the ruler has the length of the fundamental scale? For special relativity, the ruler would still appear shorter than this unit of measurement. Special relativity is therefore clearly incompatible with the introduction of a basic graininess of spacetime.