ekim,
What I was suggesting is that Logos is Intelligence rather than a precursor, the word 'intelligence' being used in the sense of its Latin origin i.e. choose between.
You can suggest that choice-making is the precursor of intelligence, but choice-making itself must have come from somewhere. It’s not a particularly big stretch though to imagine, say, a relatively primitive species “choosing” to move toward or away from a light source according to its photosensitive receptors’ responses to sunlight and shadow.
In the John Gospel where it says 'In the beginning was the Logos' suggests to me, the beginning of the creation process rather than before the beginning and was no more a special case than gravity, but I would guess that it is special in the sense that it perhaps applies to life forms rather than lifeless forms.
Well, there was no telling what the iron-age authors had in mind when they wrote it but it seems reasonable to assume they were trying to make sense of the world to the best of their abilities within the bounds of the limited knowledge available at the time.
I would suppose that the incremental aspect of emergence would be thought to arise from repetition of a trial and error approach with an intelligence driven feedback loop monitoring success and failure and optimising the result.
Sort of. Billions of trials for sure, but no “optimising” in the controlling sense you suggest. To take the example above, if the species “chose” to move away from direct sunlight in the heat of the day and thus didn’t get frazzled, eventually its successors would have that function embedded at the genetic level.
Perhaps complexity of life forms is intelligence driven.
No. You can’t use intelligence to choose to be more complex.
Complexity incidentally isn’t necessarily functional. Ferns for example have many more base pairs of genes than we do, not because they’re all put to use but rather because they’ve been around a lot longer and so have had much more opportunity for mutation, most of which is functionally redundant.