Abstract
Reacting against the turn to transcendence that heavily characterized the medieval
worldview, the modern worldview is fundamentally exemplified by a threefold turn
to immanence, consisting of a subjective turn, a linguistic turn and an experiential turn.
Language plays a pivotal role here since it mediates between the subjective and the
experiential. Ricoeur’s treatment of metaphor, significantly laid out in his The Rule of
Metaphor, is crucial in bringing about this linguistic turn that mediates the subject and
its experience of the world. Through an analysis of “seeing as” as a poietic reconfiguration
of reality in the subject’s experience, language transforms and founds the world as a
“being as.” What is disclosed in this interpretative transformation of reality is not simply
an hermeneutical ontology but possibly—also through language—an hermeneutical
axiology.