I'm curious about your statement, "We don't have the information to calculate the probabilities in the evolution of eyes."
I'm just sharing with you my thought process here:
Although a single mutation may have a large effect, we know from many studies the odds of genetic mutations and we have immense knowledge about development, speciation and genetic drift, recessive and dominant traits, etc.
But we may put that aside and do more simple math:
Your claim (and I like to go from the hypothesis method, we assume you are correct and then we can go down the path together) is "The evidence says that it did" (meaning a priori evolution works without ID and eyes developed 30 times independently).
Number of species: Estimates of the total progeny of evolution range from 5 to 50 billion species. Yet, only an estimated 5 to 50 million species are alive today. These 5 to 50 millions were obviously best adapted/evolved.
Let's take the least conservative estimate (to give the math a chance, pun not intended). Among 50 billion species, eyes independently evoled 30 times, that is, every 1.5 billion species will have 1 that evolves an eye. Sounds like great odds to me (I'm being serious). Sounds eminently reasonable.
This page advocates against ID and IComplexity:
Evolution - A-Z - Evolution of the eye and says "The complete evolution of an eye like that of a vertebrate or octupus took about 2000 steps. Nilsson and Pelger used estimates of heritability and strength of selection to calculate how long the change might take; their answer was about 400,000 generations. Far from being difficult to evolve, the model shows that it is rather easy."
Ah, but the eyes that evolved independently 30 times had to also evolve connection nerves to a/the brain, focusing mechanisms, placement on the animal, and about 100 other mechanisms you and I can try to name if we're so inclined. Don't doubt it, my own eyes focus to different distances, have contracting pupils to admit different amounts of light, correct spherical and chromatic aberration, and my brain processes sight so I can catch a thrown ball that comes to me on parabola, etc., etc., etc.
For another example I find fascinating, parts of my eyes must make tiny vibration to see something the width of a single human hair, etc.
All these things and more (if your speciality was molecular biology or the inner workings of a cell you'd say HUNDREDS of mechanisms and THOUSANDS of genetic mechanisms in DNA, even millions) evolved per phylogeny perhaps
30 separate times. But you "don't know the odds", right? You don't see that the odds are astronomical? You don't see that no fossils are extant where the eyes of a species are located in the wrong place on the animal (like on their behind so they randomly evolved to see what lies behind them instead of oncoming objects)?
The last is, of course, because, random evolution has tremendous power to evolve working mechanisms, of course. It all makes sense in a blind faith sort of way (pun intended).
Your main response to IC and ID is "The evidence says that it did, so your odds are wrong. Sorry."
Which can be redacted to:
"Only fully formed species, with properly working eyes, are extant in the fossil record and exist in modern species, which can be interpreted as either GodDidIt or EvolutionGodDidIt."
Let's not talk about this any more until you think through the odds--that would be appropriate for taking the SAME data as I and assuming random processes. Occam's looking at the amazing creation that is an eye(s) says a designer did it.