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Scientific Capital

A specific form of Academic Capital particular to scientific fields: the accumulated resources, reputations, and networks that confer authority within scientific communities. Scientific Capital includes lab directorships, principal investigator status, key publications in high-impact journals, membership in prestigious academies, Nobel prizes and other awards, and the power to define research agendas for entire fields. Those with abundant Scientific Capital don't just do science—they shape what science gets done, what questions are worth asking, what methods are legitimate, which results are trusted. Scientific Capital explains why certain labs attract the best students and funding, why some researchers become gatekeepers of their disciplines, and why paradigm shifts often require not just new evidence but the death of old capital-holders.
Example: "The older researcher dismissed the new technique not because he'd evaluated it, but because his Scientific Capital was invested in the old method—challenging it meant devaluing his own accumulated resources."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Academic Capital

The accumulated resources, credentials, reputations, and networks that confer status and power within academic fields. Academic Capital includes publications in prestigious journals, positions at elite institutions, citations from influential scholars, grants won, students trained, committee memberships held, and the intangible but crucial asset of being known by those who matter. Like economic capital, Academic Capital can be accumulated, invested, converted (into economic capital through consultancies or administrative salaries), and inherited (through mentorship networks and academic lineages). Those with abundant Academic Capital set the terms of their fields: they define what counts as important work, who gets hired, which journals matter. Those without it struggle to be heard, regardless of the quality of their ideas. Academic Capital explains why the same idea from a Nobel laureate transforms a field while from a graduate student goes unnoticed.
Example: "Her paper was brilliant, but without Academic Capital it languished in an obscure journal. When a famous scholar published the same argument five years later, it became foundational. The idea wasn't better—the capital was."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Legal Capital

The accumulated resources, credentials, reputations, and networks that confer status and power within legal fields and institutions. Legal Capital includes degrees from prestigious law schools, positions at elite firms or courts, a record of won cases, judicial appointments, published opinions, the respect of peers, and the intangible but crucial asset of being known by those who matter in the legal world. Like other forms of capital, Legal Capital can be accumulated, invested, converted into economic capital (through lucrative partnerships or consultancies), and inherited (through clerkships with influential judges or family connections in the legal world). Those with abundant Legal Capital shape what law is—their interpretations carry weight, their arguments become precedents, their mere involvement in a case changes its trajectory. Those without it struggle to be heard, regardless of the merits of their position. Legal Capital explains why the same argument from a Supreme Court justice transforms jurisprudence while from a public defender goes unnoticed.
Example: "His brief was brilliant, but he lacked Legal Capital—fresh out of a third-tier school with no connections. When a partner at an elite firm filed the same argument six months later, it shaped the court's decision. The words were the same; the capital wasn't."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Nation Capital

The accumulated resources, prestige, and symbolic power associated with belonging to or being recognized as a member of a particular nation. Nation Capital operates both within nations (where certain regions or ethnic groups carry more status) and internationally (where passport strength, economic power, and cultural prestige attach to national identity). A US passport carries Nation Capital—it opens doors, signals certain assumptions, grants easier movement. Being from a nation with cultural prestige (French for cuisine, Italian for design, German for engineering) confers Nation Capital in specific fields. Nation Capital can be deployed, converted (into economic capital through tourism or exports), and even appropriated (through branding, cultural appropriation, or strategic identity claims). It explains why the same action—opening a restaurant, making a film, filing a patent—carries different weight depending on the national identity attached to it.
Example: "His wine was good, but it came from a country with no Nation Capital in viticulture—so it sold for twenty dollars. When a French producer made an identical wine, it sold for eighty. The liquid was the same; the Nation Capital wasn't."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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State Capital

The accumulated resources, privileges, and symbolic power derived from one's relationship to a state apparatus. State Capital takes multiple forms: citizenship itself (the ultimate form, conferring rights and protections), official positions (bureaucratic appointments, elected office), credentials issued by the state (licenses, certifications, passports), and the intangible authority of being recognized as a legitimate state actor. Those with abundant State Capital move through the world differently—borders open for them, paperwork processes faster, their words carry official weight. Those without it (stateless persons, undocumented immigrants, those with precarious status) experience the state as a barrier rather than a resource. State Capital explains why the same action—crossing a border, starting a business, getting married—is effortless for some and impossible for others, based entirely on their accumulated capital in relation to states.
Example: "They arrived at the border together. His passport (State Capital from a wealthy nation) got him through in minutes. Her documents (precarious status, refugee claim) meant hours of questioning. The difference wasn't personal; it was pure State Capital."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Vincent Caprisun

This little Schamp is awesomly retarded with his favorite solgan being im slow
by XxWifeSmootherxX November 18, 2024
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Frozen capybara

the act of repeatedly jizzing in a condom until filled, tying it off and putting it in the freezer to make a cüm Popsicle dildo. where's the capybara part? before use, roll it around in some lûbe and then into a pile of loose pubes. So cute and cuddly.
Me: that girl has such a hot vagina
Friend: give her the frozen capybara
by Huttttt January 7, 2025
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