I believe the answer to this question is C.
The Enlightenment affected people's attitudes about government in two main ways Before the Enlightenment, essentially everyone agreed that countries should be governed by monarchs. They believed that God had appointed certain people to rule over others. This seemed to them like the logical way to run a country.
Creon will not listen to anybody - he thinks that he is the smartest one and that his decisions are the only ones that are worth something. He will never admit that he is wrong, until the end of the play when his whole family dies. He is guilty of hubris, which is excessive pride, which is the cause of his downfall.