Option A: Wrong
The option herein, is contextually wrong because it offers only a repetitive meaning to the subject matter without clear cut and meaningful deliberation on the aims and objectives of the contextual correlation with the demands of the article description.
Option B: Wrong
The option is a long intuitive sentence that is grammatically archaic, obsolete and out- of- date with common linguistic realities. It has a complex narrative and would offer a better meaningful description of the subject at hand had it been less verbose.
Option C: Wrong
In certain circumstances as in the sentence here, perfection is required to be able to qualify for whatever threshold a writer and audience wants. In choosing this qualification so carefully, one must look for the most perfect for even if there are thousands.
Option D: Wrong
In this statement ''being'' is a verb- the present participle of ''be'' which should be used to qualify a noun or a pronoun. It is partially correct herein but sounds too grammatically vague and less comprehensive for a layman situation.
Option E: Right
''Because it provides'' studies the article written and carefully analyses it logically both grammatically and contextually. It is a direct substitution or replacement so to say of ''an account of''. It is thus the most correct analytically.