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How hierarchical social structures perpetuate inequality across generations and shape health outcomes.
The study of how societies distribute resources, authority, and esteem has occupied social theorists for well over a century. From the earliest sociological inquiries into industrial capitalism to contemporary analyses of health disparities, scholars have recognized that power, privilege, and prestige are not merely abstract constructs but tangible determinants of life chances—including physical and mental health. Understanding these concepts is essential for the MCAT because Foundational Concept 10 explicitly links social stratification to differential health outcomes, demanding that test-takers integrate sociological theory with biomedical knowledge.
Taken together, these intellectual developments converge on a central question that the MCAT expects you to address: How do unequal distributions of power, privilege, and prestige reproduce themselves across generations, and what are the downstream consequences for health? The sections that follow systematically unpack each construct and its mechanisms.
Before diving into the mechanisms of social reproduction, it is critical to establish precise definitions for the four foundational constructs in this content area. Each concept is analytically distinct, yet they interrelate in complex ways that stratify populations along multiple axes. Weber's tripartite model—class, status, and party—provides the scaffolding, while Bourdieu's concept of social reproduction explains the intergenerational persistence of these hierarchies.
It is important to recognize that Weber's dimensions are analytically independent but empirically correlated. A university professor may enjoy high prestige but moderate economic power; a drug lord may wield enormous coercive power but possess minimal legitimate prestige. The MCAT frequently tests whether students can disentangle these dimensions in passage-based scenarios.
The diagram above captures two complementary theoretical frameworks that you must synthesize for the MCAT. Weber's tripartite model (top row) emphasizes that stratification is multidimensional—an individual's position in the economic hierarchy does not fully predict their social honor or political influence. Bourdieu's reproduction cycle (bottom row) explains how these hierarchies persist: families invest their various forms of capital (economic, cultural, social) in their children, the educational system sorts children in ways that reward the habitus and capital of dominant classes, and labor market outcomes regenerate the capital differentials that initiated the cycle. Health disparities are embedded at every stage, because each node in the cycle gates access to material and psychosocial resources that protect against disease.
Social reproduction is not a single mechanism but a constellation of interrelated processes. Bourdieu identified three primary forms of capital that are converted, accumulated, and transmitted across generations, each with direct implications for health. Understanding these capital forms and their interconversions is crucial for MCAT passages that ask you to identify how social position translates into health outcomes.
| Capital Type | Definition | Examples | Health Pathway |
|---|---|---|---|
| Economic Capital | Material and financial assets that are immediately convertible to money | Income, wealth, property, investments, inheritance | Affords quality healthcare, nutritious food, safe housing, lower allostatic load |
| Cultural Capital | Knowledge, skills, education, and cultural competencies valued by dominant institutions | Educational credentials (institutionalized), mannerisms and taste (embodied), books and art (objectified) | Health literacy, ability to navigate healthcare systems, understanding of preventive care |
| Social Capital | Resources accessible through social networks and group memberships | Professional networks, alumni associations, community organizations, 'who you know' | Referrals to specialists, social support buffering stress, access to health information through networks |
Central to Bourdieu's theory of social reproduction is the concept of habitus—the deeply internalized set of dispositions, tastes, perceptions, and practices that individuals acquire through socialization within their class position. Habitus is not merely a set of conscious beliefs; it is a durable, transposable system of embodied predispositions that shapes how individuals perceive, interpret, and act within social fields. For example, a child raised in a professional-class family internalizes not only explicit knowledge about educational expectations but also implicit bodily comportment, speech patterns, and aesthetic preferences that signal competence to institutional gatekeepers—teachers, admissions officers, employers, and even healthcare providers.
In health contexts, habitus manifests as class-linked health behaviors and orientations toward the body. Research consistently shows that working-class habitus may prioritize instrumental views of the body (health as the ability to work), while professional-class habitus tends toward a more reflexive, preventive orientation (health as an end in itself). These are not individual 'choices' in a vacuum but are structured by material conditions and internalized dispositions—precisely the kind of nuance the MCAT rewards in its social science passages.
The concepts of power, privilege, prestige, and social reproduction do not operate along a single axis. Intersectionality describes how multiple social identities—race, class, gender, sexuality, disability status, immigration status—intersect to create unique configurations of advantage and disadvantage that are greater than the sum of their parts. A low-income Black woman, for instance, experiences compounding effects of racial discrimination, gender-based inequality, and class-based deprivation that cannot be understood by analyzing each axis in isolation. The MCAT expects you to recognize that health disparities often arise from these intersecting systems of oppression and privilege rather than from single-variable explanations.
The concept of weathering (Arline Geronimus, 1992) is particularly relevant here. Weathering posits that the cumulative physiological toll of chronic exposure to social and economic adversity accelerates biological aging among marginalized populations. This is measurable through biomarkers such as telomere length, cortisol dysregulation, and inflammatory markers—connecting the sociological constructs of power and privilege directly to cellular biology. For the MCAT, this represents the kind of biopsychosocial integration that Section 4 questions demand.
The following worked example mirrors the kind of passage-based reasoning the MCAT requires. It integrates power, privilege, prestige, and social reproduction into a health outcome analysis.
The MCAT draws on multiple sociological perspectives to frame questions about power, privilege, prestige, and social reproduction. Each perspective offers distinct insights and has characteristic limitations. Being able to identify which perspective an MCAT passage is invoking—and which alternative perspective might better explain the data—is a critical test-taking skill.
| Theoretical Perspective | Key Claims About Stratification | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Functionalism (Davis-Moore) | Stratification is necessary and universal; it ensures the most talented individuals fill the most functionally important positions through differential rewards | Explains why all societies exhibit some form of inequality; identifies incentive structures | Circular reasoning (important positions = well-rewarded); ignores inherited advantage; legitimates inequality as 'natural' |
| Conflict Theory (Marx, Weber) | Stratification results from competition over scarce resources; dominant groups use power to maintain their privileged position at the expense of subordinate groups | Highlights exploitation and structural inequality; explains resistance and social change; central to understanding health disparities | May overemphasize conflict at the expense of cooperation; Marx's focus on class can underweight other axes (race, gender) |
| Symbolic Interactionism | Stratification is maintained through everyday interactions, labeling, and symbolic displays of status; individuals construct meaning around class, race, and gender through micro-level encounters | Captures lived experience of inequality; explains how prestige is performed and recognized in daily life | Difficult to scale to macro-level analysis; may understate structural constraints |
| Social Constructionism | Categories of stratification (race, class, gender) are socially constructed rather than biologically determined; privilege and power are maintained through the naturalization of these constructs | Denaturalizes inequality; reveals how categories are historically contingent; essential for understanding racial health disparities | Risks relativism if taken to extremes; constructed categories still have real material consequences |
The constructs of power, privilege, prestige, and social reproduction connect to several other MCAT-testable concepts across Foundational Concepts 10, 11, and 12. Mastering these connections allows you to handle the cross-cutting questions that frequently appear on the exam, where a single passage may require you to integrate sociological theory with psychological concepts and biological mechanisms.
| This Lesson's Concept | Connected MCAT Concept | Nature of the Connection |
|---|---|---|
| Power (Weber's authority types) | Social institutions (10B) | Institutions (government, healthcare, education) are vehicles through which rational-legal authority structures access to resources and shapes population health |
| Privilege & intersectionality | Prejudice & discrimination (10C) | Privilege is the systemic counterpart to discrimination; prejudice operates at the individual cognitive level (stereotypes, implicit bias) while privilege operates at the structural level |
| Prestige & status | Social identity (Concept 11) | Social identity theory (Tajfel & Turner) explains how individuals derive self-esteem from group memberships; prestige hierarchies shape in-group/out-group dynamics and discrimination |
| Social reproduction | Socialization (Concept 11) | Primary and secondary socialization are the vehicles through which habitus is transmitted; agents of socialization (family, school, peers, media) reproduce class-specific dispositions |
| Allostatic load from chronic inequality | Stress & the HPA axis (Concept 7) | Chronic psychosocial stress from marginalized status activates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, leading to sustained cortisol elevation, immune dysregulation, and cardiometabolic disease—the biological embodiment of social inequality |
A forward-looking note: as you progress through Foundational Concept 10, you will encounter fundamental cause theory (Link & Phelan) in greater depth. This theory argues that SES is a 'meta-cause' of disease precisely because it encapsulates access to the flexible resources—money, knowledge, power, prestige, and social connections—discussed in this lesson. Even as specific risk factors change over time (e.g., smoking declines, but obesity rises), the association between SES and health persists because those with resources can always mobilize them to exploit new health-protective strategies. This is the ultimate expression of how power, privilege, and prestige reproduce health inequality across historical epochs.
This lesson has established the foundational framework for understanding how power (the ability to achieve goals against resistance, exercised through traditional, charismatic, and rational-legal authority), privilege (unearned advantages conferred by dominant group membership), and prestige (social honor attached to positions within status hierarchies) constitute Weber's three analytically independent but empirically correlated dimensions of stratification. Social reproduction, as theorized by Bourdieu, explains how these inequalities persist across generations through the intergenerational transmission of economic, cultural, and social capital, mediated by the habitus—the durable system of internalized dispositions shaped by one's class position.
For the MCAT, the critical integration is between these sociological constructs and health outcomes. Intersectionality reveals that multiple axes of stratification compound to produce unique health burdens, while fundamental cause theory explains why the SES-health gradient persists even as specific diseases and risk factors change. The biological embodiment of social inequality occurs through allostatic load and weathering—the cumulative physiological toll of chronic psychosocial stress on marginalized populations. Remember that MCAT questions in this domain reward answers that integrate structural explanations (conflict theory, social reproduction) with individual-level mechanisms (stress physiology, health behavior), and that identify the most comprehensive, multilevel explanation among the answer choices.