Yes. What we call intelligence and intent is on par with what the spider does when it builds a web... we are programmed to interact with our environment via our genes-- we assimilate, recombine, and copy information. We use products... we purchase products... we earn money... we are programmed to make our environment take care of us...and in doing so, we can't help but be the part on information evolving information systems... whether it's the words we say, the place we live, the products we buy, the products we don't by, or the stuff we produce to earn an income--we are the replicators and honers of information that has been assimilated so far-- whether it's math, language, a blueprint, or a computer. We are born into an evolving environment and we play a role in the evolution of the information in that environment both in genes and "ideas" and via the products we use, the memes we spread, the knowledge we share,--then we die... but everything that evolved through us can live on. Future generations will inherit a "more evolved" version of our ideas, learning, technology, science, environment-- for better or for worse... the history of the world that might appear in some future textbooks is growing exponentially because as people grow... so does the information, event, discoveries, and sharing of information. This forum evolves... this thread evolves... once you have a replication and selection system in place there is nowhere to go but forward and branching off and specializing...or dying out...tapering off... There is just no backwards to information. Not in genomes... not in technology... not in language... not in science....
Human information gets copied and moves through time or it does not... DNA gets copied and moves through time or it does not... technological design is a continuum in regards to intelligence and intent.... so is agriculture and selective breeding... so are the webs spiders build or the dances bees do... you can take intelligence and intent out of the equation and you will understand that it's all about INFORMATION that is good at getting itself copied into the future via coding for something that is preferentially selected by the environment it finds itself in.
Airplane designs that always produce airplanes that fly are copied preferentially-- and from those models new designs emerge and differentiate based on those that end up being copied the most... for whatever reasons--government contract, cheapness, safety, use, efficiency, cost-revenue ration, military usage, etc. And all of it comes from what came right before-- there are no great leaps... just the next step... the same for genomes over time. Those credited with inventing something new really just reassembled information that we already had and tweaked it in a way that made it more useful or replicable or desirable to it's human replicators. Nobody is building anything from the scratch. The 747 could not have been built 100 years ago although all the atoms were available for making one. Humans could not exist until apes did. Our genomes show us how the information has been amassing over time. When you look at how the information evolved for whatever complex item you see, you understand that as complex and stellar as it might be... it is truly the product of a lot of "designers" amassing data over time and moving forward at barely noticeable increments along the way. It's through snapshots in time that we can "see" the results of evolution, but what is really evolving is the information that makes the things we see.
Technology as an analogy is easy to intuit... the time span is so sped up... whereas, evolution takes eons for barely noticeable changes. Those who understand Southwinds analogy, have a good basis for understanding evolution...things evolve because they can.