Many good answers here. I’d like to add that instincts are but one layer in a multilayered control mechanism available to living beings.
Autonomous processes are available to even single cell organisms. Metabolism, heartbeat, growth and healing are all autonomous. The mechanisms respond to local conditions, mostly in and around the actual cells. Hormones are used to trigger responses in disparate parts of a multicellular organism.
Reflexes are on a slightly higher level, often involving local nerves and muscles. Blinking when something approaches your eyes, or dropping something too hot to hold, happens before the brain has time to register the impulse. Breathing is a reflex, so is digestion (a bunch of them actually, residing in their own nervous system).
Instincts are on the next level, and reside in the brain. They make us want to eat, sleep, mate and so on. They can elicit much more complex responses than reflexes, and as far as I know, all animals with brains have them. Maybe they’re how brains evolved in the first place.
Emotions are the next level of control mechanism, and they’re important for social bonding, cooperation and cohesion.
Intelligence is the next level, which enables analysis, teaching and learning, and at the highest level invention and rational thought.
It’d argue that creativity and curiosity are the icing on the intelligence cake. They compel us to exercise our intelligence in all sorts of interesting ways. Curiosity is quite old (rats, cats and some birds are famously curious), while creativity is very new – as far as we know, it started only 90000 years ago, when humans began to create art all over the place.
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