Or how many animals employ murder, necrophilia, torture, [censored], genocide in the one and same species or race? How about something more postive? How many animals are capable of love, compassion, empathy, sympathy, charity in the one and same species or race? And what if you combine these qualities in the same species or race? How many animals do that? To state that human behavior and what it cause can lead to something inevitable just seems wrong, because human behavior operate outside the traditional bonds of nature and as such can seem to be exempted from some natural inevitabilities. There's too much random chance in human behavior because it is a composite of many behaviors, many of which appear to be very rarely found in other animals.
Quite a lot actually.
Murder is as common as muck in the animal kingdom, premeditated murder as well, such as seen in chimpansees.
It is a mistake to classify just about
anything humans do as unique for humans, and it is a bigger mistake to think humans are in any way special in the animal kingdom.
These kind of homocentric misconceptions cloud the issue more than they are helpful.
Extensive studies have been done as to the nature of empathy, particularly among fruitbats, and the mechanisms behind it are quite well understood. Not only does empathy increase the chance of survival for the group as a whole, members of a group also remember who is charitable and kind, and who always asks but never gives. As such it increases survival chances for the individual who is sassy enough to give in times of plenty.
Free will is also very much debatable, current consensus seems to be that there isnt really any such thing.
Free wont is another story.