I understand the Neo Darwinian model....but I don't agree with it. Fundamentally, in this model, the reason any trait appears is random.
Arguably, no; however, the proximate cause is likely happening on a scale that makes the environmental factors which will exert selection functionally irrelevant. It's random with respect to the macroscopic activity the organism is encountering.
NS acts only on phenotypes that happen to arise by chance.
Functionally, yes; absolutely, possibly (arguably probably) not.
Phenotypic plasticity clearly indicates that phenotypes do not just happen to arise. They arise in response to environmental requirements.
No, it doesn't; they arise, in terms of the environmental influences, in most instances randomly. They
persist in response to the environmental pressures, but they arise regardless.
There is an intelligent responsive 'program' built into the system.
I have seen no evidence of that whatsoever; I'd be interested to see some creditable science that suggests that.
Some people will immediately argue that the intelligent responsive element is itself a 'selected' trait through NS. That is having the cake and eating it too!
That really depends on if the response is a cultural one (i.e. tribalism, mating rituals) or something phsyiological (i.e. long necks, webbed feet).
Once 'survival' becomes an objective of evolution...there is intent behind it.
If survival became an objective, yes; however, survival is overwhelmingly more often simply a result, there is no planning, there are just organisms that survival preferentially because of a functionally random trait emerging or diminishing.
O.