Aaron Wintrich

My name is Aaron Wintrich and I am the founder of Art For A Dream which is an association of artists that supports humanitarian causes with their artwork. I personally advocate and fundraise for stem cell research and have a network of associates in this field.

I fundraise and advocate for regenerative medicine with my art because my art is what helped bring me out of my own developmental challenges and why I became a developmental therapist for autistic and down syndrome children and because regenerative medicine has the potential to cure these types of genetic diseases in vitro, mitigating the disorders associated with these genetic issues which is my main focus and reason I fundraise for regenerative medicine. As a developmental therapist I work with these children on their artistic and life skills which is proving to be beneficial to them as it supports teaching them some fundamental techniques in a fun supportive environment that they can take with them going forward as productive individuals in society. Until we have cures for these diseases I will continue to do the work and create the art I do to help fund stem cell research and help people with such challenges. My dream is to have a medical system based on regenerative medicine instead of one on developmental therapy, medicine, and disability which would benefit the overall health of our communities and the world so people can have the cures they need in order to work and be productive members of society.

My artwork specifically uses the elements of the Avant Garde masters as a conceptual collage to illustrate art history. The viewer can see the elements of each of the masters in my artwork and can use my artwork as a source of reference to these elements. This method not only educates on how to paint and draw but it also teaches who developed these elements and when they were developed in a historical context. This method of teaching works because it is an applied method of teaching art and art history I use as a therapist and is what helped me work through my own challenges and why I graduated from the Pinellas County Center for the Arts program in Visual Art and why I will be graduating this December 2015 from the University of South Florida with a Bachelor’s Degree in History which is a level of education none of my other classmates in my Individual Education Plan program achieved. I also volunteer at the Museum of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg for the Florida Youth Ranch Service seminars teaching art to orphans in order to prevent delinquency.

Here is my website and personal page:

http://artforadream.org/cms/artists/v/aaron-wintrich.html


Portfolio:

Art For A Dream

Chess is one of the best example's I have found to use in the argument of free will vs. determinism. Determinists believe all action and causes in the universe have a measurable and predictable effect, and therefore all effects have a traceable lineage of causes which negates the possibility of free agency. However in chess if we analyze a position with the strongest level computer program, the program will generate multiple moves it can choose from each with different percentages of success. While a person would most likely choose the move with the highest percentage, the chess program itself will sometimes choose the move with a lower percentage of success; say the 75% success rate move instead of the 90% success rate move. Why would the computer choose to make a move which is less likely for success when it had generated better moves? If determinism states that all things in the universe mechanically operate in a predictable way to achieve the most probable state, why then with the above example we see an operation taking place where probability in one instance is not used? Is it our fallibility and imperfection, the fact that we do not always make the best or most probable choice which is our free will? Perhaps free will is not necessarily our ability to choose an outcome but the potential which exists that does not force us to stay on our predestined path? Although the right choice may seem apparent, it is still a difficult one to make...

The apparent and Yet Difficult Choices Found in Spatial Reasoning “The apparent and Yet Difficult Choices Found in Spatial Reasoning”

Chess is one of the best example's I have found to use in the argument of free will vs. determinism. Determinists believe all action and causes in the universe have a measurable and predictable effect, and therefore all effects have a traceable lineage of causes which negates the possibility of free agency. However in chess if we analyze a position with the strongest level computer program, the program will generate multiple moves it can choose from each with different percentages of success. While a person would most likely choose the move with the highest percentage, the chess program itself will sometimes choose the move with a lower percentage of success; say the 75% success rate move instead of the 90% success rate move. Why would the computer choose to make a move which is less likely for success when it had generated better moves? If determinism states that all things in the universe mechanically operate in a predictable way to achieve the most probable state, why then with the above example we see an operation taking place where probability in one instance is not used? Is it our fallibility and imperfection, the fact that we do not always make the best or most probable choice which is our free will? Perhaps free will is not necessarily our ability to choose an outcome but the potential which exists that does not force us to stay on our predestined path? Although the right choice may seem apparent, it is still a difficult one to make...

We are a Finite Permutation Infinitely Recurring “We are a Finite Permutation Infinitely Recurring”

Imagine the life you are living right now is one that you have already lived before, and one you will live again. If it is possible once, why is it not possible again? The eternal recurrence is an idea that has been around for thousands of years. The earliest known literature on the concept can be found in the ancient Hindu Vedic scriptures, as well as in the classical Greek texts of the Stoics, and also in the German philosophical works of Friedrich Nietzsche and others. As the ancient Hindu philosopher Kanada described in his works on the universe and matter, no object animate or inanimate has an infinite amount of matter in it otherwise it would also weigh an infinite amount. Therefore if we were to divide any object we would eventually get to a point that could no longer be divided, which he called “anu” the root word for atom. The Ancient Greek philosophers like Democritus further described this characteristic of nature as one that would lead to determinism, where the atoms behave as billiard balls on a pool table knocking into and bouncing off into each other in a measurable and predictable way, and so leaves little room for free will and agency of any being. The later Epicureans objected, stating that the atoms exhibit an unpredictable curve and so allows free agency. The Epicureans would eventually dissolve into the Stoic school with famous philosophers such as Chrysippus who discussed the possibility of the Eternal recurrence. The idea suggests that if there is a finite amount of matter in our bodies, and also in the universe, but time itself is infinite, this would mean that given enough time throughout the eons any combination of matter in existence such as in our bodies, an apple, the Earth, etc., would eventually be recycled and re-manifested as it was before and we would relive a previous state of being. Perhaps every moment of our lives is one we have already lived? This idea was also the foundation of Nietzsche’s own work, who believed was the most enlightening of all his discoveries. I personally am not sure, but I wonder if this is why we have Déjà vu?...

Fear In Dreams Caused By Stressful Stimuli On The Amygdala During Waking Life “Fear In Dreams Caused By Stressful Stimuli On The Amygdala During Waking Life”

Why do we dream? The answer to this question has a long evolutionary story. During the time when the earliest mammals walked the Earth we see a distinct physiological difference from their reptilian and amphibian cousins. All of these species had a common ancestor, however mammals were unique. Reptiles did not evolve to have as developed amygdaloid complex as mammals, which is a brain structure responsible for emotions and works together with the hippocampus which converts short term memory into long term memory. Both the amygdala and hippocampus work together to create and link emotional experiences to memories. We can understand the importance and relevance of this process to dreams by explaining the evolutionary story of the brain and how these neurological features evolved.
The greater development of the amygdala found in mammals comes from their nose which is directly linked to the amygdala. Mammals have the greatest sense of smell in the animal kingdom because they typically hunt at night and so evolved a necessary nose and sense of smell to find food to compensate for not being able to see in the dark. Therefore, as mammals olfactory senses evolved into better developed systems, so then did their amygdala. This is also why the sense of smell in humans is our greatest trigger for recalling past memories. In comparison to reptiles, we can see how this neurological difference is reflected in mammals behavior. For example, when reptiles reproduce they typically do not form lifelong pair bonds with their mates and lay multiple eggs which they then leave to fend for themselves. Mammals on the other hand in many cases do form lifelong pair bonds, have fewer children and rear their young until they are matured enough to survive on their own. Mammals develop such bonds with their mates as well as with their young because, unlike reptiles, their higher developed amygdala-hippocampus complex allows them to convert short term memory into long term memory more effectively and attach feelings to those memories which allows them to recall with whom they successfully mated. Also we can see that memory as a trait increases mammals chances of survival over reptiles because they can remember to avoid negative stimuli previously experienced through recall of those past dangers rather than simply reacting to it based on its immediate experience. We can also see the importance of this in child rearing as a mammalian mother’s memory and emotional love for their young increases the chances of their child’s survival through territorial and protective behavior, and as all life strives to survive and reproduce, traits that increase these possibilities are selected. Both of these behaviors are evolutionary advantages for an individual’s and therefore a community’s survival and it is these same behaviors that humans have inherited from our early mammalian ancestors.
But how exactly does memory work and how does this benefit us through dreams? It works in part through what is known as neuron oscillation. As an electrical impulse in the brain is triggered from an external experience, such as a light wave transmitted through the eye, which will oscillate around the neuron at the same frequency as the incoming information’s wavelength, molding the neuron into a shape and connection with other neurons to retain the information of the experience. However, in order for the memory to “stick” it often needs an emotional reinforcement, i.e. the amygdala. We remember things that create an emotion in us, avoiding things that cause negative emotions and seeking out ones that cause positive ones, and this is what the amygdala does. To increase our survival we link emotions to memories, memories like that of tornadoes, sharks, and aliens from watching too many horror movies, to the emotion of fear. We create these memories and relate them to fear so that if we experience them again in the future we can preemptively run and hide before they get too close so that we survive. And in order to further the growth and reinforcement of these memories so that they “stick”, we sleep and we dream. Cellular division and cell reproduction occurs the most while we sleep, obtaining building blocks from the digested food we eat to create new cells. We experience dreams as a byproduct from the growth and creation of these new brain cells while we sleep and the connections they make with other cells as an evolutionary advantage we have over other organisms to reinforce the memories of our waking/conscious life into our subconscious and therefore enhance our probability of survival.