If watches grew on trees and I encountered one by its lonesome, I wouldn't know whether it was made by a human or by nature. Sure, I could look around for any watch trees that may have been the source, but I couldn't be sure either way. A real world example would be smoothed stones by the beach. Both nature and humans create smooth stones, but since the stone is by the beach my first assumption would be that it was formed into its current shape by the ocean.
Hmm, okay. I like those caveats.
So what happens when you see an arrangement that is incredibly unlikely that non-conscious forces would produce, but you don't know of any conscious actor who could do it? Say, finding a giant stone obelisk on the moon.
Although, since we don't have any smoking guns that are smaller than "the universe happens to support life"... Crud. I'm going back to deism again, which is boring. Still, hypothetically speaking, what happens to the watchmaker argument when you find something that appears neither human-producable nor nature-producable?
What about a pile of rocks is complex? The reason that you could say that it is designed is because they don't occur naturally. The point is, the argument is non sequitur.
I don't see where you're getting that. I *very explicitly* did not argue that the human eye was designed. I outright said that the watchmaker argument is falsifiable given any proof. My argument is that it is a valid starting point BEFORE significant proof is established in either direction.
Are you saying that if you see a pile of flat rocks stacked on a log, far above the waterline, your first instinct is to say "Wow, how amazing that nature formed that"? What about the Pyramids of Egypt?
Given no in-depth information beyond surface inspection--and that's all we really have about the underlying origin of the universe--I don't think it's reasonable to approach every single damn thing and say "Golly, nature sure is wacky".