ImmortalFlame
Woke gremlin
For the sake of all that is good and holy...Assuming 100% of mutations are beneficial/toward eyes evolving, how many gene changes have to occur, in what time frame, to make it happen? We don't need survivability, heritable changes, evolutiondidit or anything, but a simple understanding--how many DNA changes happened to sequence eye formation in species?
This is like asking "how many pieces of string do you need to reach the moon?". Not all mutations produce the same amount of change, and the evolutionary pathways are myriad. There is no singular way or rate at which the eye, or any organ, evolved, and trying to catalogue the exact pathway of every single mutation that lead to its formation would require nothing less than a thorough autopsy and genetic analysis of every population of every organism that has ever lived that is an ancestor of eye-bearing animals. Do you not see how unreasonable this request is?
This is an example of a freighted question, and if you understood evolution you would realize how meaningless this question is. I'm sick of pointing this out to you.