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However, Marx later became disillusioned with many of the Young Hegelians. He and Fredrich Engels would go on to co-write [https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1845/holy-family/index.htm The Holy Family], and [https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1845/german-ideology/ The German Ideology] as a critique of the Young Hegelians. The latter majorly consisting of a refutation of [[File:Ego.png]] [[Egoism|Max Stirner's]] "Der Einzige und Sein Eigentum", which allowed Marx to abandone the Young Hegelian concept of humanism towards his 'Dialetical Materialism'.
Some of the many other influences on Marxism can be found in classical economics such as [[File:Clib.png]] [[Classical Liberalism|Adam Smith]] and [[File:ricardosoc.png]] [[Ricardian Socialism|David Ricardo]] who created the labor theory of value (LTV), and the "[[File:Utsoc.png]] utopian socialists" such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Étienne Cabet, Henri de Saint-Simon.
Before Marxism, Marx himself was a [[File:RadLib.png]] [[Radicalism|Radical Liberal]]
===[[File:Ormarxf.png]] Marx and [[File:Orengelsf.png]] Engels===
In 1844, on the way to [[File:Cball-Germany.png]] Germany, Fredrich Engels stopped in [[File:Cball-France.png]] Paris to meet Karl Marx, with whom he had an earlier correspondence. Marx had been living in [[File:Cball-France.png]] Paris since late October 1843, after the ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rheinische_Zeitung Rheinische Zeitung]'' was banned in March 1843 by [[File:Cball-Prussia.png]] Prussian governmental authorities. Prior to meeting Marx, Engels had become established as a fully developed materialist and scientific socialist, independent of Marx's philosophical development.[[File:Fig9-marxengels.png|thumb|A depiction of Marx and Engels writing.]]
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