Um...C? That's a weird question...
The answer you are looking for is <span>C. It resolves the conflict over whether Creon will realize his own flaws; it does so by showing that he realizes his pride, not Eurydice's curse, is to blame for his family's deaths because him admiting he was wrong and taking the blame shows that he realizes his own flaws</span>
<span>He uses Locke's argument that if a government or ruler goes against the wishes of a people, the people can revolt and set up a new government.
Jefferson basically outlines all the stuff King George III/British government did wrong against the colonies and so he says the colonies then had the natural right to change their governments</span>