A question that seems to often be asked of accidental evolutionists is how gradual mutations could have resulted in such complex body parts as the eye.
The eye is an incredible instrument resembling a complex camera. It has a shutter, a lens, delicate cells which convert light into data, and the ability to constantly keep the lens clear from blockages.
Accidental evolutionists will respond that it would be easy to imagine primitive creatures having light-sensitive cells which gradually, over billions of years, develop into the complex eyes we have today. Yes, they proclaim, there is just enough time for all these developments. Enough time for accidental developments? Is there evidence of partial improvements? Simply the mention of a timetable for random, accidental developments is contradictory to say the least.
We must remember that we aren’t just talking about gradually improving just one eye. We are talking about every complexity existing within the human body. We are talking about the liver, the heart, the lungs, the genitals, the nervous system, the brain and the intestines: All are made up of tremendous complexity and synchronicity of composition. These specialized organs and tissue systems consist of many layers of networks traveling through each of them, including neural, circulatory, lymphatic, biochemical, etc.

All of these layers work simultaneously and within biorhythms tuned not only to each other but to the larger rhythms of the universe. Human beings have worked for many years trying to purposely recreate only a few of the functioning parts of the body.

Are we saying that all of these complexities accidentally developed? More importantly, are we saying that all these complexities accidentally developed among molecules on an interactive basis to develop simultaneously into complex systems?