About

Bazfin is an independent, research-oriented project concerned with the study of architectures in which coordinated behaviour arises without central control.

The work focuses on structural questions that recur across domains traditionally treated separately, including human and artificial cognition, social and institutional organisation, and economic systems. These domains are approached as distinct instantiations of related architectural problems, rather than as expressions of a single underlying model.

The project proceeds by architectural comparison. Attention is given to how distributed systems allocate attention, coordinate activity, maintain stability, and enter phases of breakdown. Emphasis is placed on structure and interaction rather than on optimisation, prediction, or normative prescription.

Financial markets are included as one empirical case among others. Their relevance lies in the visibility of decentralised coordination, signalling, and feedback processes, and in the availability of high-frequency and historical data. Markets are not treated as the primary subject of the site, nor as a privileged explanatory domain.

Material relating to short-term trading and market practice is maintained separately and does not form part of the core research programme. This separation is intended to preserve conceptual clarity between architectural enquiry and practical activity.

Bazfin does not promote products, offer financial advice, or advance a unified theory. Its purpose is to support careful comparison of architectures across domains, and to clarify what structural features recur, where analogies break down, and what this implies for the study of minds, societies, and complex systems more generally.