Instincts don't arise due to NS.
More foot-stamping.
Why do you continue to ignore the actual explanation...?
Did DNA start to replicate due to natural selection? That is rubbish.
Nobody suggested that replication
started due to natural selection - and it certainly wasn't due to instinct or consciousness either.
Yet again:
something started to replicate for entirely chemical reasons. Let's say it's an RNA strand like this (which actually does replicate if given the right chemical environment):
NNNNNNUGCUCGAUUGGUAACAGUUUGAAUGGGUUGAAGUAU–GAGACCGNNNNNN
Obviously it doesn't have any instincts, it's just a molecule. All we then need is for the replication to be imperfect sometimes so we have variation. Once we have variation, some replicators can be better than others at replicating in the environment. If resources are (or become) limited with respect to the population, so not every individual survives, then
obviously those that are better at surviving and replicating will come to dominate.
Over time, variations that aid survival will build up in the population and each individual will have accumulated lots of individual traits that aid its survival and reproduction in its environment. At some point, some observer may look at all these traits and say "oh look, these things have a 'survival instinct'", and if they don't understand natural selection and think it's just a metaphor, then they may jump to daft conclusion about that being the cause, rather than the effect.