Answer:
Both recognize rationalism and humanism as part of European culture and both believed in class organization and alliance.
Step-by-step explanation:
Mills conceives Marx's work as a constitutive part of social science. And he says it in a way that seems essentially correct: "There is social science: without the work of Marx and other Marxists, it would not be what it is today, only with this work, it would not have the quality it has "Whoever has not encountered the ideas of Marxism can not be a competent social scientist, whoever believes that Marxism holds the last word, can not be too." He says: "For us today Marx's work is a point of departure and not a finished view of the social world we are trying to understand. "Mills does not see Marx merely as a" classic "of social science: he thinks that the intellectual value of classical Marxism and Marxism in general is not merely historical; has a direct intellectual relevance today.