CONCEPT
Neutral Exploration
The process by which organisms — or populations of explorers in any structured space — wander through
functionally equivalent configurations, accumulating positional diversity that places them adjacent to innovations they could not reach from their starting point.
Neutral exploration is the mechanism by which robustness produces evolvability. An organism accumulating mutations that do not alter its phenotype is not standing still — it is traversing genotype space along a network of
functional equivalence, continuously updating the set of innovations that are one step away. Under the traditional view, these neutral changes were evolutionary
noise.
Wagner reframed them as infrastructure: the invisible drift that looks like nothing happening is the preparation for discoveries that cannot be reached from
the original position. The wandering is the work. The adjacency that wandering produces is what makes the arrival of novelty
inevitable rather than miraculous.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Motoo Kimura's 1968 neutral theory established that the majority of molecular evolutionary changes are selectively neutral — neither helpful nor harmful, simply accumulating as drift. The theory was controversial when published but its central empirical observation has been confirmed across decades of molecular data.