Well, I use the "design vs accident" argument, at its core, as a reference to the first thing that ever existed that man's "science" would call a "life form". Not potential life. Not something that could lead to life, but something "science" would call "alive".
Regarding everything else, all bets are off. My belief is that he created man, as opposed to letting the environment he created just naturally result in "man". But I was not there. I can't be sure. It is possible that the act of creating man was to use many, many years of evolution to develop the first man, not to be confused with the physical parents of that first man. Which is where it gets complicated, if you think about it.
I find the discoveries made by science, even within the scope of the evolution debate, to be fascinating and exciting. It's the conclusions and inferences from those discoveries that I usually have a problem with. Frankly, they remind me of catholics who believe that when the bible says someone is Jesus brother, it really means "cousin". It makes no sens until you realize that they teach that Mary NEVER had sex. Then you see how it is imperative that they do not interpret scripture that way.
I see the same thing from BOTH sides of the evolution debate. Raw facts can not be denied. Unprovable hypotheses can.