EPH-MCP: Emergent Pattern Hunter

EPH-MCP: Emergent Pattern Hunter

Enables AI systems to reason through emergent thinking by breaking queries into fragments that interact and form patterns, simulating how insights naturally arise in complex systems. Provides tools for emergent reasoning, pattern analysis, thought comparison, and reasoning session history.

Category
Visit Server

README

🕸️ EPH-MCP: Emergent Pattern Hunter

A revolutionary thinking architecture for LLMs via MCP (Model Context Protocol)

EPH-MCP transforms how AI systems reason by simulating the emergence of insights from interacting thought fragments, similar to how patterns arise in complex physical systems.

Key Features

  • Bottom-up Insight Emergence: Instead of forcing conclusions, the insights just show up once all the pieces bounce around enough.
  • Quantum-like Thought Dynamics: Ideas overlap, collide, and stick together—sometimes they’re in two states at once until the picture clears.
  • Multi-scale Pattern Detection: We can spot the small stuff and the big picture at the same time—like zooming from street level to skyline.
  • Contradiction as Feature: Tension isn’t a bug, it’s fuel. Conflicts push the thinking somewhere new.
  • Field-based Reasoning: Everything plays out in this high-dimensional “idea space,” where concepts pull, push, and interact like a living grid.

🚀 Quick Start

Installation

# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/yourusername/eph-mcp.git
cd eph-mcp

# Install dependencies
pip install -r requirements.txt
python -m spacy download en_core_web_sm

# Quick test
python quickstart.py

Basic Usage

Start MCP Server

python -m eph_mcp.server

The server will start on localhost:3333 by default.

How It Works

EPH uses a 5-phase process:

Phase 1: Thought Explosion

First we blow up the question into a bunch of little sparks—50 to 150 fragments, each one a different angle or half-formed idea.
We mix in every trick we’ve got: free association, “what if” games, parallel universes, quantum superposition vibes.
Each fragment lands in some wild high-dimensional space, like confetti drifting around a cosmic dance floor.

Phase 2: Interaction Dynamics

Now those fragments start bumping into each other like charged particles.

  • Similar ones pull together.
  • Opposites push apart.
  • Some bind tightly, others spin off.

It’s basically like running a mini-universe simulation where ideas collide until the system chills into something stable (simulated annealing).

Phase 3: Pattern Detection

From the chaos, we spot emergent shapes—like finding constellations in the stars:

  • Crystalline lattices → clean, regular structures
  • Strange attractors → looping chaos
  • Phase transitions → that “sudden click” when ideas reorganize
  • Soliton waves → insights that keep traveling without losing shape
  • …plus more funky forms

Phase 4: Pattern Crystallization

Here, the raw patterns solidify into actual insights.
We check each one for:

  • Confidence (does it hold up?)
  • Novelty (is it fresh?)
  • Clarity (can you actually explain it to a friend?)

We don’t force everything to agree—contradictions are saved too, like tension in a good story.

Phase 5: Pattern Weaving

Finally, we stitch the insights together into something you can actually use.
Different ways to weave:

  • Convergent synthesis → pull it all into one neat answer
  • Dialectical → thesis + antithesis → synthesis
  • Narrative threading → tell it like a story, connecting the dots naturally

📊 Configuration

Create a config.json file to customize behavior:

{
  "explosion": {
    "n_fragments": 100,
    "temperature": 1.5,
    "embedding_model": "all-MiniLM-L6-v2"
  },
  "interaction": {
    "iterations": 150,
    "initial_temperature": 1.0,
    "cooling_rate": 0.995
  },
  "detection": {
    "min_pattern_size": 3,
    "pattern_threshold": 0.5
  },
  "crystallization": {
    "confidence_threshold": 0.5,
    "novelty_threshold": 0.3
  },
  "weaving": {
    "max_insights": 5,
    "coherence_threshold": 0.6
  }
}

🛠️ MCP Tools

The server exposes 4 main tools via MCP:

think_emergently

Main reasoning tool - applies full EPH process

{
  "query": "Your question here",
  "return_intermediate": false,
  "visualize": true
}

analyze_patterns

Analyze text for emergent patterns without full reasoning

{
  "text": "Text to analyze",
  "pattern_types": ["contradiction", "harmony"],
  "min_confidence": 0.5
}

compare_thoughts

Compare multiple ideas for relationships

{
  "thoughts": ["idea 1", "idea 2", "idea 3"],
  "find_contradictions": true,
  "find_harmonies": true
}

reasoning_history

Access and analyze past reasoning sessions

{
  "last_n": 5,
  "analyze": true
}

Enable with visualization.enabled: true in config.

Testing

Run the test suite:

# Basic tests
python tests/test_basic.py

# Full test suite (if available)
pytest tests/

📚 Examples

Explore different reasoning scenarios:

python examples/usage_examples.py

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Areas of interest:

  • New generation strategies for thought explosion
  • Alternative pattern detection algorithms
  • Visualization improvements
  • Performance optimization
  • Integration with other MCP tools

Acknowledgments

  • Inspired by physics and emergent systems

"In the dance of fragments, meaning emerges" - EPH Philosophy

Recommended Servers

playwright-mcp

playwright-mcp

A Model Context Protocol server that enables LLMs to interact with web pages through structured accessibility snapshots without requiring vision models or screenshots.

Official
Featured
TypeScript
Magic Component Platform (MCP)

Magic Component Platform (MCP)

An AI-powered tool that generates modern UI components from natural language descriptions, integrating with popular IDEs to streamline UI development workflow.

Official
Featured
Local
TypeScript
Audiense Insights MCP Server

Audiense Insights MCP Server

Enables interaction with Audiense Insights accounts via the Model Context Protocol, facilitating the extraction and analysis of marketing insights and audience data including demographics, behavior, and influencer engagement.

Official
Featured
Local
TypeScript
VeyraX MCP

VeyraX MCP

Single MCP tool to connect all your favorite tools: Gmail, Calendar and 40 more.

Official
Featured
Local
graphlit-mcp-server

graphlit-mcp-server

The Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server enables integration between MCP clients and the Graphlit service. Ingest anything from Slack to Gmail to podcast feeds, in addition to web crawling, into a Graphlit project - and then retrieve relevant contents from the MCP client.

Official
Featured
TypeScript
Kagi MCP Server

Kagi MCP Server

An MCP server that integrates Kagi search capabilities with Claude AI, enabling Claude to perform real-time web searches when answering questions that require up-to-date information.

Official
Featured
Python
E2B

E2B

Using MCP to run code via e2b.

Official
Featured
Neon Database

Neon Database

MCP server for interacting with Neon Management API and databases

Official
Featured
Exa Search

Exa Search

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server lets AI assistants like Claude use the Exa AI Search API for web searches. This setup allows AI models to get real-time web information in a safe and controlled way.

Official
Featured
Qdrant Server

Qdrant Server

This repository is an example of how to create a MCP server for Qdrant, a vector search engine.

Official
Featured