The thesis follows the principle that not all theory is equally suitable for understanding the COVID-19 pandemic and the measures against it, especially that which cannot conceptualize biopolitics in an affirmative sense. We define biopolitics as a technology of power that acts on the biological features of the population, and we thus distinguish it from previous technologies of power. We explain that since the 18th century, the object of the exercising of power has been the population, and we briefly discuss historical concepts of population management. We then reconstruct the genealogy of race through the discourse of war, thereby understanding race with Foucault as a group of people with certain biological characteristics. We discuss the relationship between these features and the role of the state and the capitalist market in neoliberalism, and find that the state plays a key role in the pandemic, while paying particular attention to the biopolitics of women's bodies. We also state the role of the law and show that totalitarianism is not an appropriate concept for conceptualizing biopolitics. We critically portray humanism and state the benefit of an anti-humanist approach to understanding the pandemic. We also show the key role of an appropriate perception of the relationship between human and science and technology, after which we explain the contemporary functioning of technology in relation to biopolitics and list some examples of the use of technology.
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