Yes, Marx continued to influence social philosophers in multiple ways. True, with the evolution of history, the character of capitalism changed with the growth of a techno-managerial professional class바카라”a class that, as many political sociologists argue, does not fall into the typical Marxian 바카라˜bourgeois바카라™ vs 바카라˜proletariat바카라™ dichotomy.  Furthermore, modernity began to acquire yet another meaning with conspicuous consumption, technological violence, rising authoritarianism and devastating war. Hence, we saw something beyond 바카라˜official Marxism바카라™바카라”its economistic determinism and scientism. We saw Gramsci바카라™s critique of Bukharin and Plekhanov, his deep reflections on the changing character of the state in advanced capitalism바카라”the way it sees beyond 바카라˜coercion바카라™, and establishes its 바카라˜hegemony바카라™, or manages to get active 바카라˜consent바카라™ from people through the ideological play of the entire network of 바카라˜civil society바카라™: schools, media or religion. Or how the passionate champions of 바카라˜Frankfurt School Marxism바카라™바카라”Adorno, Horkheimer and Marcuse바카라”taught us about the 바카라˜culture industry바카라™: the way it standardises our cultural tastes, causes intellectual dumbness, promotes 바카라˜one-dimensional바카라™ thinking, and leads to a 바카라˜new form of social control바카라™. In a way, from 바카라˜economistic바카라™ Marxism we saw a move towards culturally nuanced/humanistic Marxism. In a way, the intellectual history of the twentieth century experimented with Marx.