Dos Santos, the pizza guy: an proscribed in the impossible city
City Planning. Urban proscription. Pizza guys. Dromology. Anti-nihilism.
This thesis approaches the proscription of pizza guys throughout the dromological city, how dromology is for them, both a hypothetical imperative and, already in anti-Kantian terms, a categorical imperative. That is, how much it subjugates them and how much it exponentializes them to an almost innate propensity. To do so, it starts with the urban situation of a particular pizza guy (Dos Santos), making use of the notion of “monad”; so soon it could be said that the city of each one is imbricated in the city of all, being that, at the same time, in the city of all the city of each one is also imbricated. The idea is, therefore, more than addressing pizza guys as contemporary proscribed throughout such a monadic city, after all, an impossible city, to also highlight the disruptive potentialities of this urban imbrication not only in the face of urbanism, but also in the face of the state of affairs through which urbanism consolidates its episteme.