No! All consciousness seeks to explain, understand and control reality. This not only drives all life and all evolution but it is a defining characteristic of consciousness.
Most living things are content to live their day-to-day lives with no thought of explanation, meaning or a need for control.
Evolution is driven by blind natural selection, mutation, genetic drift, gene flow, &c. No intent or consciousness necessary.
It is what life does and this applies even to homo omnisciencis. But unlike all other species on earth we have a complex language which we use to pass down learning and use as a medium for learning. Essentially our species has two modes for looking at the big picture; religion and science.
No argument here, though I do question the efficacy of the former.
Of course reductionistic science by definition does a very poor job of seeing the big picture. Religion in many ways in some important areas provides a better understanding of reality than science. But like Caesar science must have the final word everywhere experiment and thought contradict.
Science does a superior job of seeing "the big picture." Religion is content with "Goddidit!", and no proposed mechanism. Plus it discourages inquiry.
Biology, chemistry, geology, physics: all science. Religion had thousands of years to come up with a big picture -- or
any picture -- of how the world works, and it failed utterly.
This isn't to say any existing religion presents a clear picture of reality, merely that they all present a picture where science can not.
Picturing reality isn't even religion's bailiwick. Religion's domain is purpose, value, meaning, &c. Describing reality is science's magisterium.