No, Cantleave, you are missing the point and clouding the issue.
Did you miss this point: Human-designed devices, such as radios and computers, do not need to function until their assembly is complete. By contrast, living organisms must function to a high degree in order to thrive during every developmental stage from a single-cell zygote to adult. The embryo as a whole must be a fully functioning system in its specific environment during every second of its entire development.
I,
personally, ascribe the position of the laryngeal nerve to the development of
the fetus, "necessary consequences of developmental
dynamics," and not because of bad design. Blechschmidt compares it to
the course of a river, which "cannot be explained on the basis of a
knowledge of its sources, its tributaries, or the specific locations of the
harbors at its mouth. It is only the total topographical circumstances that
determine the river's course." This has been confirmed by dissection of
human cadavers. The fact that Blechschmidt believes in the theory of evolution
is not important. Whatever the case, he will not be using the position of the
laryngeal nerve in the human body as a proof of this theory, I can assure you.
The article you mention actually discusses the benefits of this arrangement, so it's not bad design at all. Actually, it's brilliant.