"I understand where you're coming from. But the fact is, the mind can do incredible things in certain situations. Even if a person had such a spiritual experience, yes, they may believe it to be proof of the existence of God, but the fact is, you cannot always trust what you see/hear/fee, as your mind can and does play tricks on youl.
If i dreamt of a 30ft pink rabbit, it doesn't mean I'm going to believe it to be real, or start to worship the almighty 30ft pink rabbit. These spiritual experiences people claim they had can be triggered by a number of things and by no means is the working of a God."
And I understand where you are coming from as well, I used to make the same argument (nearly verbatim), but such an argument has problems. You are right when you say that you cannot always trust your senses and experiences; however, with such experiences, we are not necessarily talking about a single experience - what of the Buddhist monk who has been practicing for 60 years? Who are you to say his spiritual experiences are not authentic?
The belief in God is entirely reasonable, it's the assertion that there is a God that is unreasonable. Does this clarify my position any?
"What makes you think bacteria isn't intelligent life? So you define intelligence as what? The building of society, perhaps? Then look no further than ants, they even have their own tribes and will carry out raids on each other. Do we assume that these ants will not evolve socially? Can we communicate with them to find out? How do we know what they think? Sorry to ask such obvious questions."
Hehehe, bacteria as intelligent life. If the organism lacks a brain, the organism, necessarily, cannot be intelligent. Even your example of ants is full of holes - they are simply not complex enough to rationalize (which also happens to be an implied answer to your question - the ability to reason denotes intellect, and the degree of intellect can be judge by the complexity of the creature's reasoning powers - which is why monkeys are intelligent, just to an extremely slight degree when compared to humans, the most intelligent example of life known to us). As for social evolution, or the ability to evolve at all - that is a moot point. So what if an organism can evolve? The ability to, at some point, develop a particular characteristic is no reason to consider a creature to have already developed a particular characteristic. And, I love questions.
"Life is an explosion. Where there is the capability for life you will find all types of creatures wanting to live. Even bacteria needs to feed off something. I agree, we may stumble across a planet that is just starting to come alive. What if we are god, because we are the first. We have sent probes to mars before, I believe these are for more than just collecting data, I believe we are trying to instigate a Mars genesis."
Again you say that life is an explosion, but I'm unclear on what you mean. If you mean that life necessarily begets competition, sure, I can go with that. As for being God because we are the first to arrive at another planet, I'm not sure I follow. How does being the "first" make one God, or god for that matter. As for a Mars genesis, perhaps, but technologically we are far, far away from being able to even land a man on the planet, much less establish some form of life there.