
The Author
The Theory of Fundamental Belief was not born from an editorial plan—it was born from a process.
Over years of continuous observation, lived experience, and deep study across multiple fields of knowledge, the TFB began to take shape. It emerged from the combination of direct experience, prolonged observation, and knowledge.
The journey began in 2019 with an application that united science, human behavior, and spirituality. Among more than 800 startups, it placed third among the five that would be accelerated. The app helped save thousands of lives over four years.
Today, the TFB is an integrative theory capable of dialoguing with different areas, opening paths of reflection and conversing with any field willing to listen—without imposing truths nor closing doors.
"Each case is a case, and nothing is by chance. This is not a catchphrase, but rather a realization that only appears when we look back with enough honesty to see the connections."
Key milestones in the development of the Theory of Fundamental Belief
First public manifestation about the direct relationship between an internal element and the collapse of external life. The first public record that would later become structural in the TFB.
Launch of an application uniting science, human behavior, and spirituality. Among more than 800 startups, it placed third among the five that would be accelerated.
With the pandemic, the application reached its point of greatest impact. Online meetings became daily, sometimes occurring eight times a day. Thousands of users found support.
What worked began to be organized as a method. The method allowed repetition, comparison, and refinement. Technology became methodology, and methodology became theory.
After thousands of hours of study across all possible academic areas, the Theory of Fundamental Belief was formally named and structured.
The TFB is an integrative theory capable of dialoguing with different areas, opening paths of reflection and conversing with any field willing to listen—without imposing truths nor closing doors.
There are moments in life when pain forces us to look inward. It is there, in the silence between what breaks and what is born, that something begins to whisper. The Theory of Fundamental Belief was not born in a laboratory nor at an altar. It was born from human experience, from someone who lost everything and still found meaning to continue.
For a long time I tried to understand the universe only with reason. But it was the void that explained to me what science could not name. It was faith that showed me that logic and mystery are two sides of the same equation. And it was life, with its falls, healings, and new beginnings, that taught me that believing is the force that moves everything.
The TFB is more than a theory; it is a translation. It translates what cannot be explained into human language. It shows that everything that exists, visible or not, is born from the same principle: Belief is the matrix of reality.
Each thought is a seed. Each emotion is a field. Each action is a reflection of what we cannot see becoming form. And this is what the TFB reveals: that there is no separation between what we feel and what we create, between what we believe and what we live. The universe is not random. It responds. It reflects. It believes with us.
When science observes the atom, faith observes purpose. When the physicist speaks of the quantum vacuum, the spiritual speaks of spirit. But both are describing the same thing: the presence of a greater power that sustains everything.
Today, I understand that belief is not outside of us—it is the very movement of consciousness expanding. The TFB does not ask you to believe in something; it invites you to perceive what you have always believed, even without knowing. It does not try to prove God; it shows that the entire universe is living evidence that He manifests Himself all the time, in every particle, in every silence, in every awakened heart.
Because, in the end, the Theory of Fundamental Belief is about this: about a presence that dwells within us, about the power of conscious faith, and about the reunion between science and the soul.
"I believe in the God who created man, not in the God that man created."
— Chris Montgomery