Quote from heidegger:
When you conjure up a mental visual image do you not see it with the 'mind's eye'? You don't hear it or touch it; you see it. Is this not a kind of seeing?
"A bee, by all human standards, does not have a mind." How are you using the phrase "by all human standards" here? Perhaps a bee has no mind 'by human standards' but it may have a mind in that it might have consciousness. This point of yours directs us to a need to understand the nature of mind and consciousness - a task beyond even your vast intellect.
Quoting Bertrand Russell's prose (from wikipedia):
"If we say that the things known must be in the mind, we are either un-duly limiting the mind's power of knowing, or we are uttering a mere tautology. We are uttering a mere tautology if we mean by 'in the mind' the same as by 'before the mind', i.e. if we mean merely being apprehended by the mind. But if we mean this, we shall have to admit that what, in this sense, is in the mind, may nevertheless be not mental. Thus when we realize the nature of knowledge, Berkeley's argument is seen to be wrong in substance as well as in form, and his grounds for supposing that 'idea'-i.e. the objects apprehended-must be mental, are found to have no validity whatever. Hence his grounds in favour of the idealism may be dismissed."
If the validity of your argument rests on whether a bee has a mind...