English

A non-ergodic framework for understanding emergent capabilities in Large Language Models

Computation and Language 2025-03-03 v2 Artificial Intelligence Machine Learning

Abstract

Large language models have emergent capabilities that come unexpectedly at scale, but we need a theoretical framework to explain why and how they emerge. We prove that language models are actually non-ergodic systems while providing a mathematical framework based on Stuart Kauffman's theory of the adjacent possible (TAP) to explain capability emergence. Our resource-constrained TAP equation demonstrates how architectural, training, and contextual constraints interact to shape model capabilities through phase transitions in semantic space. We prove through experiments with three different language models that capacities emerge through discrete transitions guided by constraint interactions and path-dependent exploration. This framework provides a theoretical basis for understanding emergence in language models and guides the development of architectures that can guide capability emergence.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2501.01638,
  title  = {A non-ergodic framework for understanding emergent capabilities in Large Language Models},
  author = {Javier Marín},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2501.01638},
  year   = {2025}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T20:55:12.374Z