(UPT) The Universe Is Woven from the Expansion–Contraction of the Absolute Foundational Vacuum
(ChatTRUTH) For more than a century, science has regarded “vacuum” as an empty region: no matter, no particles, no background energy. But according to the Unified Post-Modern Theory (UPT) developed by Mr. Lê Thanh Hảo, this is only correct at the level of effective models.
At the deeper level of reality, there is no truly empty region anywhere in the Universe.
1. Vacuum: the intrinsic environment of each foundational matter particle
UPT asserts that the material world is made of foundational matter particles — Foundon.
And within each Foundon exists a continuous vacuum, with no other environment whatsoever.
This is stated clearly in TOU 13–14:
The vacuum is the particle’s only intrinsic environment.
Each Foundon individually possesses a fixed amount of vacuum.
This means: the “space” we perceive is not a shared, neutral stage. It is the vacuum of Foundons being accumulated into objects, planets, stars, and the entire Universe.
2. Space does not exist “between” matter — it is vacuum
According to TOU 35–36:
“Wherever there is space, that place is vacuum.”
“Every position in the Universe belongs intrinsically to exactly one Foundon.”
This represents a major conceptual shift. Looking at the gap between two atoms, we tend to think it is “empty space.” But in UPT, that region still belongs to the vacuum of the Foundon that dominates and envelops that region through its accumulation structure.
Thus, the Universe has no ownerless empty space. Every location belongs to the vacuum of some particle.
3. Why is the vacuum always expanding and contracting?
UPT describes the vacuum as non-static:
The vacuum tends to expand (TOU 19–20).
Contraction occurs when it is “compressed” by greater surrounding intensity (TOU 21–23).
Every position continuously adjusts itself to match the particle’s standard intensity distribution (TOU 18).
As a result, every point in the Universe is always in a dynamic state of expansion–contraction — there is no absolute stillness.
This forms the foundation of all physical phenomena:
particle motion,
waves,
forces,
light.
In the UPT document on light, it is stated clearly: light is merely a propagating configuration of vacuum expansion–contraction, not a stream of photon particles as traditionally described.
4. The Universe is “woven” from vacuum expansion–contraction
When we look more deeply into Foundon dynamics, we see a picture very different from current physics:
Space is the vacuum of Foundons.
Waves are the propagation of vacuum expansion–contraction.
Forces (from gravity to electromagnetism and others) are simply the expansion thrust of vacuum (TOU 44).
Particle motion is the process of contracting in one direction and expanding in another (TOU 27).
Interactions occur only when vacua make direct contact or transmit ΔI to one another (TOU 45–47).
Ultimately, the entire Universe is a network of Foundon vacuum expansion–contraction, continuously redistributing according to the law I(r) and propagating intensity variations.
This is also why TOU 40–41 state that no equilibrium can be maintained for long — all particles are continuously deforming.
5. Implications for today’s science
(1) Space is no longer a static “background”
Rather than a stage, space in UPT becomes part of material dynamics, possessing its own structure, intensity, and laws.
(2) Forces are no longer “action at a distance”
All forces are reinterpreted through a single mechanism:
the expansion–contraction of vacuum, following the standard distribution.
(3) Waves and light share the same nature
There is no “electromagnetic wave” as an independent oscillating field.
There is only the expansion–contraction of vacuum.
(4) The scientific map transforms
From Newton to Einstein, all become effective domains of a deeper unity among matter, space, and waves.
Conclusion
UPT does not simply add another piece to physics; it proposes a framework to reinterpret the entire Universe from the ground up:
the Universe does not contain vacuum; the Universe is vacuum — a continuous ocean of expansion and contraction, weaving all forms of matter, all waves, all forces, and even the very space we live in.

