Taylor, McComas2012-03-142012-03-141022-45561574-9282http://hdl.handle.net/1885/8945"Why do the devout believe in the canonical literature of their tradition? What enables great normative texts to function as “true discourse”? The idea of “true discourse” is premised on the understanding that truth is ultimately contingent and is socially constructed. We are in the realm of localized “truths,” rather than that of some Absolute Truth which functions as a universally accepted, recognized, and applicable yardstick. Local “truth” is the currency of a given epistemic community, that is, a community with a shared set of understandings and beliefs as to what constitutes true knowledge. Each community also has defined procedures and processes by which true knowledge is produced, legitimated, and disseminated..."20 pageshttp://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/issn/1022-4556/ "Author can archive pre-print … [and] post-print … [but not] Publisher's Version/PDF … Authors own final version only can be archived … on author's website or institutional repository … Published source must be acknowledged. Must link to publisher version. Set phrase to accompany link to published version (The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com). Articles in some journals can be made Open Access on payment of additional charge" - from SHERPA/RoMEO site (as at 13/03/12)puranatextual authoritytrue discourseWhat enables canonical literature to function as “true”? The case of the Hindu Puranas200810.1007/s11407-008-9065-92015-12-08