When I was very young my mother told me that I tripped on a stone step and immediately tried to hit the step because I blamed it for me stumbling. I saw the step as having some sort of magical personality and therefore, in my mind, it was responsible for me tripping. This is not an uncommon feature in small children of course.
The way Sriram insists that there has always been some form of survival instinct induced by some sort of consciousness, seems to be an extension of such childish thinking. It would also explain his complete misunderstanding of the basic idea that if A is more likely to survive and reproduce than B then its progeny will be more likely to flourish, no survival instinct needed.. I don't think that he appreciates that any random changes which aid that effect will necessarily lead to greater chances of survival. So, just as I anthropormophised the step by making it responsible for my stumbling, Sriram is inclined to imprint some sort of non material 'consciousness' to explain evolutionary processes.
For Sriram it all ties in with his celestial worlds, universal consciousness, reincarnation ideas etc. He isn't going to deviate from this, I suspect, because it makes sense to him, just as hitting the step made sense to me when I was young.