Navigator said:
I must come accross as an idiot. But, I'm up to my waist, I've still got the shovel in hand and I'm goin deeper.
Thank you for your patience fantôme profane.
At some point some mass made a coherent decision to mate/join with another mass based on input.
Up to that point was it random, accident, fluke?
Ok, have patience with me too, it is sometimes difficult to understand exactly what it is you are asking.
In my post that you quoted I was talking about birds, now you are asking about masses and I am not quite sure what you mean. I am going to assume that you are trying to ask about the first molecules of matter that created self-replicating structures. I hope I am in the ballpark.
Fist let me say that in this case there is no coherent decision made. Sometimes when we describe the actions of non-sentient matter we will often use words that indicate they have some kind of desire, but it is just a figure of speech. I might say for example that electricity wants to find the path of least resistance, but you would understand that I am referring to natural laws, not to a conscious desire of electric forces.
I have to be honest with you, molecular chemistry/biology is not my field of expertise. But maybe that is a good thing as I will have to put this in simple terms. Molecules have the capability to come together in many different ways under different conditions. It is not an accident or a fluke when they do so, they do so according to the laws of nature. But it is random in the sense that it is not consciously directed by anyone, or at least I can say that there is no evidence of conscious direction and there is no need to hypothesis a conscious direction.
Now if some of these molecules form self-replicating systems, then we have something for natural selection to work on. Those self-replicating machines that are most adept at replicating themselves will tend to become more prevalent, using up more of the resources available, resulting in a struggle for survival, resulting in natural selection.
Does this in anyway answer your question?