No. it just restates what you said in a different way. What do you mean by, "the fabric of the universe"? How do you even quantify that? Is it what the universe is made of? If that's the case, then I'm a "human that is the fabric of the universe" and so are you.
Do you mean that it's like space/time? If so, then what does it do? Does it send you through time, or prevent you from aging through some sort of reality anomaly?
And the Greeks discovered it. Okay, how does that change anything about the object, what it does, or what it's made of? You could easily replace Greeks with Romans, Indians, Egyptians, Americans, flying monkeys, and they would all make about as much sense.
It just doesn't make any kind of sense, because you haven't described what it actually is or what it does. Try giving the idea more explanation, and if you want it to be found by the Greeks, that's fine, but have them be connected in a way that relates to the object.