With engraver Léonard Gaultier, Martin Meurisse, a philosophy professor at the Grand Couvent des Cordeliers, produced massive engravings explaining this man’s logic. For 10 points each:
[10e] The two men relied on the theory that male and female palm trees mate by intertwining to illustrate this thinker’s theory of proposition formation. A collection of his works, the Organon, were used to teach logic.
ANSWER: Aristotle
[10m] Meurisse and Gaultier’s Descriptio illustrated the mind performing apprehension as a walled one of these places. Epicurus taught in one of these places, which became symbolic of ataraxia.
ANSWER: gardens [or The Garden]
[10h] Descriptio includes a man carrying a bag of human limbs to illustrate this thinker’s concept of partition. This author of De Divisione wrote popular translations of Porphyry and Aristotle and wrote the Opuscula Sacra.
ANSWER: Boethius
<Emmett Laurie, Philosophy>