CONCEPT
The Capital Conversion Circuit
Bourdieu’s engine of social reproduction: the self-reinforcing cycle through which economic capital purchases cultural credentials, which purchase social networks, which generate symbolic recognition, which attracts new investment—a circuit the AI transition redenominates without dismantling.
In
Pierre Bourdieu’s framework, capital circulates between four forms—economic,
cultural, social, and
symbolic—through specific conversion mechanisms that are remarkably stable across historical transitions. Economic capital purchases educational credentials (institutionalized cultural capital), which provide access to professional networks (social capital), which generate reputation (symbolic capital), which attracts investment (economic capital). The circuit is not perfectly closed: friction, contingency, and individual variation introduce noise. But it is powerfully self-reinforcing, and agents who enter it with the most capital tend to exit each cycle with more. When AI tools arrive—collapsing production costs, lowering the floor of who can build, offering the same coding leverage to the developer in Lagos and the engineer at Google—the conversion circuit does not dissolve. It adapts. The currencies are redenominated: technical implementation skill was economic at the prior moment;
embodied judgment is the currency of the restructured
field. The conversion circuit continues to turn, rewarding agents who enter with the most capital in whatever