Instinct

Instinct or innate behavior is the inherent inclination of a living organism toward a particular behavior. In other words, instinct is a biologically inherited behavior pattern. Many animals presents wonderfully complex and efficient patterns such as courtship or to take care of offspring. These behavior patterns are set by the genes, they need not to be learned. Jesus mentions the parents care for the children. He points out that even the man being evil, "knows" give good gifts to his children:

Innate behavior
Innate behavior is splendid tool which meets efficiently the needs of the species in the environments in which this species normally lives. For example, an insect building a nest looks highly competent and wise, and there was no need to be learned. Migratory instincts are another marvelous example. The lesser whitethroat marble (Sylvia curruca) is a common ]]bird which breeds in temperate Europe (except the southwest part) and in western and central Asia, but winters in [[Africa. The parent birds leave behind their young birds and take off to Africa. The new generation make the same trip weeks later through thousands of miles of territory never before flown to join his parents. The information for this flight is instinctive. Another magnificent example is the golden plover (Pluvialis dominica fulva or Charadrius fulvus). These birds migrate from Alaska to spend the northern winter in Hawaii. The journey of migration, no stops, takes about 88 hours for more than 2485 miles (4000 km). How does the bird know the migration route? There is no convincing explanations than the work of the Creator. Other astonishing migration feats are: the North American golden plover (Nominatrasse), the Japanese snipe (Capella hardtwickii), the Siberian spined-tailed swift (Chaetura caudacuta) among others.

Darwin and the instinct
Darwin considered the evidence of advanced instinct in animals, even those newly born, and/or with young lifespans, a serious riddle for his theory of Evolution; one of its four major weaknesses. Evolutionist Michael Ruse concedes that one marvelous example found in nature that gave Darwin much food for thought was the splendid ability of bees to prepare their hexagonal cells in their hives. Darwin devoted all of Chapter VII, "Instinct", in "On the Origin of Species," to addressing this problem.

Sociobiology
From the launch of the book by Edward O. Wilson, "Sociobiology: The New Synthesis" sociobiology gained recognition. For this current, which can include Richard Dawkins, author of the book "The Selfish Gene", genes play a definitive role in human behavior and the characteristics such as the aggressiveness can be explained by biology, more particularly genetics. This field has generated serious opposition even among Darwinists like Richard Lewontin, Stephen Jay Gould, and Niles Eldredge.