Thank you nl for clearing up any confusion as to the origin of the amazing human eye.
I guess Mr. Spock had to take a pass on attempting to explain this one away.
But did you notice Gregory, NL didn't actually refute anything, nor attempt to prove anything. All he did was tell you the eye is a complex organ, which we already know, and then affirmed what you already believe, that it was simply too complex for it not to have been created. A statement of belief does not provide any answers. I don't see that NL cleared up anything for you.
It is true that the human eye could not have come into existence in a single step which is why evolution envisions many gradual improvements over time. Oddly it is believers who want to take the difficult route and have a deity assemble the first complete human being from scratch. Now scripture gives two competing accounts. In the first (Genesis 1:24-27) humans are created last, and in the last account (Genesis 2:18-23) humans are created first, well at least Adam was created first, then all the animals, and finally when no partner could be found among them for him, God finally created woman.
The confusion in Genesis as it pertains to the order things were created in doesn't really impact the discussion of the human eye. What bothers me is that while I admit the human eye is complex I have to think that if the eye had an intelligent creator then that Being must in itself be several orders of magnitude more complex than the eye. I think you would agree. But if the eye is so complex that it must have a creator then the even more complex deity that created the eye, must itself have an even more complex creator as well. This is simply an extension of your own logic.
I will give you another point we both can agree upon. Eyes must have a beginning. Did you know that even some single celled animals possess light sensitive patches (see article on
Euglena in Wikipedia)? Within the animal kingdom there are a whole host of examples of eyes existing in various stages of complexity, that when examined in a series show how the eye might have evolved by stages.
When you propose the eye was created by an intelligent force you must then explain the origin of that Being as well. If you insist that something with the complexity of the eye must have a designer then in good conscious how can you ignore my proposal that the creator, being at least as complex as the eye, must also have a beginning? The problem is you have no recourse to an explanation that makes any sense, so you must fall back on the equally awkward proposal that God must always have existed. However, if you don’t worry about where something as unfathomly complex as God came from, why do you worry about where the eye came from?
Here is another concern. God formed Adam from the dust of the ground and breathed life into him (Genesis 2-7). That would be like you making a functioning eye by rolling some clay into a ball and blowing on it. That might provide a satisfying answer for you, but I hope you can understand why I want something a lot more plausible.