Now, I think that I can virtually prove that the scientific conclusion is wrong using Bayesian Statistics -- but I still haven't really convinced anybody...
Try to figure out why.
During a period when many youth experience an intellectual awakening -- chemical stuff starts happening in your brain at that age -- you came up with an idea to which you immediately formed an emotional attachment. Not just an attachment to the notion that you wanted to live forever, but an attachment to the notion that if this idea were true, you should be able to prove it by some objective means.
Now, decades later, you can't let go of it.
Jabba, in my career I've come up with dozens if not hundreds of ideas that I initially thought were good. Most of them, upon examination and development, turned out not to be.
Most of them. This, I think, is par for the course. Since my youth I've worked with countless creative people, including some of the most stellar thinkers of our time. Among the success factors they share is the ability to let go something that just doesn't work. In economics it's called the sunken cost fallacy. You appear to be shoulder deep in it.
The reason you think you can prove, via Bayes, that you have an immortal soul is no more lofty than that you really, really, really want it to be true. You want immortality to be true, yes. But you also want to believe in your ability to make a great philosophical and scientific mark. But the objective facts are against you, Jabba. The errors you're making are not obscure or correctible. They are literally errors that I would expect a first-year philosophy student to identify without even breathing hard.
You need to quickly dispossess yourself of the notion that you're "somehow" still right and that your critics are "somehow" to blame for your inability to make a point. That's your ego getting in the way of doing good science. You've made your case to many smart people, all of whom have rejected it for the same good and valid reasons they've taken pains to articulate for you. You're not Aristotle or Plato or any of the other philosophers who tried and failed to prove the existence of a soul. And that's okay.
Anyway, the "Me" to which I'm alluding is a specific self-awareness that I experience (and, I assume that everyone else experiences)...
This is E in the model.
...and which I wish to continue. I certainly don't want it to be discontinued forever.
This is not part of E. An event in the Bayesian sense can't come attached with this sort of emotional baggage.
But that issue, I claim, is covered in the prior probabilities that I've suggested: P(H)=99%, and P(~H)=1%...
You're simply wrong, Jabba. You have done nothing for five years but "claim" things you can't prove. This doesn't make you smarter than Aristotle. This doesn't make your critics the entrenched morons you seem to want them to be. It's clear you don't understand enough about statistical modeling and inference to get this problem right. And I mean that: you can't produce a single statistics expert who hasn't given you a laundry list of everything -- including this -- that's wrong with your model.
Anyway, I think that my answer to the possibility that my existence requires a totally specific physical body as well as some other specific something is so improbable as to have no significant weight in our calculations...
You're just trying to play both sides of the specificity argument. You rely very heavily on the notion of specificity to try to falsify H, even if the thing you're being specific about doesn't exist in H. It's special pleading to say that specificity, or uniqueness comes into play for H, but not for your theory.
Seriously, Jabba, after five years and countless valid rebuttals, it's time to let the idea go. No one will fault you for believing you have an immortal soul. It's a common belief, and even among skeptics you'll probably hear some evolutionary theory for why we do that. But if you continue to try these patently bad arguments to live out a teenage dream, all you're really going to reap is continued rejection and ridicule. There is no objective proof for an immortal soul, and you're not a failure for missing that mark.