Clause 9. The Sovereign is absolute; for there is no other authority but that which centers in his single Person that can act with a Vigor proportionate to the Extent of such a vast Dominion.

Clause 10. The Extent of the Dominion requires an absolute Power to be vested in that Person who rules over it. It is expedient so to be that the quick Dispatch of Affairs, sent from distant Parts, might make ample Amends for the Delay occasioned by the great
Distance of the Places.
Clause 11. Every other Form of Government whatsoever would not only have been prejudicial to Russia, but would even have proved its entire Ruin....
Clause 13. What is the true End of Monarchy? Not to deprive People of their natural Liberty; but to correct their Actions, in order to
attain the supreme Good.
Clause 14. The Form of Government, therefore, which best attains this End, and at the same Time sets less Bounds than others to natural Liberty, is that which coincides with the Views and Purposes of rational Creatures, and answers the End, upon which we ought to fix a steadfast Eye in the Regulations of civil Polity.
Source: Catherine the Great, Tsar of Russia, Instructions to the Legislative Commission, 1767

2. Based on this passage, which thinker and idea would Catherine the Great agree with?
(1) Locke and his ideas about revolution
(2) Rousseau and his ideas about the purpose of government
(3) Wollstonecraft and her ideas about the slave trade
(4) de Gouges and her ideas on the rights
women

(2) Rousseau and his ideas about the purpose of government. Catherine the Great's instructions suggest a belief in the need for absolute power in order to efficiently govern a vast and diverse empire, while also emphasizing the importance of correcting actions to attain the supreme good - aligning with Rousseau's ideas about the purpose of government to ensure the common good.