It's true the eye is well designed (although it's far from perfect), and it's also true that eyesight is hugely beneficial to many creatures. But it's not true that that means evolution probably didn't produce it - in fact, it is because eyesight is so beneficial to so many creatures that evolution did bring about the design of eyes over time. Not only did e
One can fairly easily imagine some kind of crude skin-form with the kind of accretive layering that could facilitate the emergence of a light-sensitive spot. All that would be needed would be a combination of pigmented cells with light-sensitivity ratcheted onto it, and the formation of translucent cells that could encase the pigmented cells and give the structure a degree of protection. It may well take a few hundred thousand generations for even a crude eye to evolve - but as long as we can conceive of the principle for functional improvement, we can imagine the steps required*.
Translucent cells subject to mutations would have an index of refraction, because refraction is based on indices where the n of a substance (that is, the optical medium) defines how radiation (in this case, light), propagates through that medium. Once the cells underwent variations in size and density and became more cup-like we would find improved ability to facilitate dispersion, which means varying wavelengths and (in the higher forms) emergence of colour. Mutations that improve the organism would survive due to evolution's ratchet mechanism, and further improvements would emerge.
We know quite unequivocally
Later on what’s then facilitated is
But there is a bigger picture too that mustn't be missed. The eye is but one microcosmic example of the sublime beauty of God's creation through evolution. It truly is a remarkable narrative that every living thing, with such a rich multitude of shapes, sizes and colours - plants, trees, flowers, fruit, vegetables, insects, fish, dinosaurs, lizards, elephants, giraffes, hamsters, whales, sharks, chimpanzees, dogs, cats, lions, tigers and humans - all came about from a common ancestor, and then billions of years of time and adaption. Evolution really is a quite magnificent story of beauty.
* Not only has the eye evolved independently about 40 times - we now have the precise computational facilities to map out a trajectory for the evolution of the eye. This has been done numerous times - most notably by Dan Nilsson and Susanne Pelger, but on other occasions too.