Advanced vision appears almost at the very beginning of the fossil record.
This doesn't mean anything. The first organisms were not anything that could be fossilized, once they became large enough to fossilize they've already evolved quite a bit from the first cellular organisms.
Scientists readily admit that the Cambrian fossil record is very incomplete and thus, no scientific conclusions are drawn from it. So any conclusions a creationist makes based off of it don't really address anything.
Only about a third of all animal phyla contain species with proper eyes, another third contain species with light-sensitive organs only, and a third have no means of light detection, although many can detect heat
Blatantly false. There are 35 phyla and only six of them have the means to directionally detect light, those six phyla making up 96% of the species on earth. Good research on these guys' parts.
Nonetheless, of those animals with eyes, both vertebrates and most invertebrates, an enormous variety of eye designs, placement and sizes exists.
Well that sure sounds like the work of an intelligent creator and not a random, goal-less process of selective adaptation and evolution.
That said the design, placement and size might vary, but the biological structure behind the operation of all eyes are all extremely similar.
Although many kinds of very different eyes are known, no direct evidence exists to support the evolution of the eye and its accessory structures.
Yes it does, I cited it. We have a pretty good theory of how photoreceptor cells grouped together and depressed into a cup shape allowing for the angular detection of light, a very simple and primitive structure still seen in the planaria and other animals.
Extensive amounts of evidence indicate that color-sensitive cells mutated from a single ancestral gene. I've explained this more times than I should have to. It isn't "potential", there's evidence and research behind this claim. Where's the evidence for yours, that isn't posted on a website with "Creation" or "Genesis" in the URL?
But again, scientists will readily admit that the evolution of the eye is an incomplete theory and research is still being done on it. This article attacks conclusions that don't exist.
Furthermore, much evidence contradicts such evolutionary beliefs. For example, note in table 1 that the number of myelinated fibres in the optic nerve does not correlate with putative evolutionary development. A pigeon has almost as many fibres as a human. Many birds, such as the eagle and hawk, have excellent vision yet have half as many fibres as a domestic pig.
Vision has everything to do with the shape and number of cones in the eye, and has virtually nothing to do with the number of optic nerve fibers. Eagles have over 4 times as many cones in their eyes as humans do, and as the number of cones in a species increases/decreases, so does their eyesight.
Does that correspond with evolutionary beliefs? Or are we still ignoring facts that contradict your views, while creating false facts out of nothing to make it seem plausible?
Another example is visual pigments.
Again, what the fuck does this matter? Why would a creator make an eye with so many different types of color-sensitive cells? You have no explanation for that either.
If primates didn't have any advantage over dichromacy with trichromacy, then it wouldn't appear in their population. It happened for humans and further evolved for birds who rely on their sight far more than most animals do, but this doesn't even work as hypothetical evidence towards anything.
I don't know why they keep saying primates are the most evolved creatures as if that means every single structure must be equally as good as any other animal. Humans can't run as fast as a cheetah, we can't jump as high as a flea relative to our size, we can't live underwater like a fish, we can't fly, at what point does any of this become evidence towards anything?
Organisms are
specialized and blind comparisons between ones with vast differences don't prove, disprove or even support any arguments whatsoever, unless there is a scientific explanation of why it's a fair comparison.
This entire article reeks of pseudo-science and pandering towards its fundamentalist audiences. I'm honestly embarrassed that you posted that thinking it demonstrates anything of value. I'm not going to waste my time addressing the huge amount of false claims and logical fallacies these sort of arguments
constantly have.