Toni Santos is a cognitive designer and symbolic systems researcher who explores the intersection between ritual, perception, and interactive design. Through a cross-cultural and transdisciplinary lens, Toni investigates how ancient and modern societies have used structured gestures, spatial arrangements, and sensory triggers to shape thought, memory, and emotional states.

Rooted in a fascination with how rituals function as cognitive technology, Toni studies interfaces that are neither purely digital nor mechanical—but embodied, symbolic, and intentional. From sacred geometry and mnemonic artifacts to ceremonial choreographies and spatial encoding, his work reveals how ritual design influences neurocognitive patterns and cultural transmission.
With a background in semiotics, phenomenology, and interface theory, Toni reconstructs the frameworks through which rituals become tools for cognitive transformation—bridging the gap between sacred practice and system design.
As the curator of blog Bazgus, Toni shares illustrated studies, speculative diagrams, and interpretive essays that bring attention to the often-overlooked structures of thinking embedded in ritual space.
His work is a tribute to:
The architecture of meaning in ritual practices
The sensory mechanics of attention and transformation
The fusion of cognitive science and symbolic tradition
Whether you’re a designer, anthropologist, or seeker of deep pattern, Toni invites you to engage with a world where cognition is shaped by gesture, form, and intentional flow — one ritual interface at a time.