Nonsense.
You are wrong. Here's what Dawkins said:
Although the monkey/Shakespeare model is useful for explaining the distinction between single-step seleciton and cumulative selection, it is misleading in important ways. One of these is that, in each generation of selective 'breading', the mutant 'progeny' phrases were judged according to the criterion of resemblance to a distant ideal target, the phrase METHINKS IT IS LIKE A WASEL. Life isn't like that. Evolution has no long-term goal. There is no long-distance target, no final perfection to serve as a criterion for selection, although human vanity cherishes the absurd notion that our species is the final goal of evolution. In real life, the criterion for selection is always short-term, either simple survival or, more generally, reproductive success. If, after the aeons, what looks like progress towards some distant goal seems, with hindsight, to have been achieved, this is always an incidental consequence of many generations of short-term selection. The 'watchmaker' that is cumulative natural selection is blind to the future and has n o long-term goal.
The more interesting question by far is "What drives you people to so desperately seek ultimate 'answers' that do not involve God?" You simply have no case. It is obvious that the universe was indeed intelligently designed. The part of that design that we think we understand are called laws of physics or laws of nature. Science is engaged in discerning only the surface of that intelligence, breast thumping by the so-called scientists notwithstanding. But "intelligence" is a wholly inadequate word here. The capacities required are so far beyond genius that humanity can only hope ever to plumb the shallowest of its depths.