Genuine happiness consists not in pleasurable feelings but instead in one’s ... ...

Genuine happiness consists not in pleasurable feelings but instead in one’s sense of approval of one’s character and projects. Thus the happy life, in fact, tends to be the good life, where the good life is understood not—as it usually is these days—as a life of material well-being but rather as a morally virtuous life.

Which one of the following is an assumption required by the argument?


(A) A morally virtuous life requires the rejection of material well-being.
(B) ...
(C) ...
(D) ...
(E) ...

*This question is included in PT72 (Jun 2014): Logical Reasoning A