When Einstein developed relativity theory, its prediction of Mercury's orbit was hugely significant, but Mercury's orbit was already known at the time, so why should a theory get any credit for predicting something that was already known? The trick is to pretend the evidence wasn't already known. If Mercury's orbit hadn't already been known, would relativity's prediction of it be very confirming? Yes, because the theory wasn't ad hoc in anyway.
And that's where Jabba goes wong. His hypotheses are ad hoc. Neither of his hypotheses predicted Jabba, specifically, would exist. In fact, there was no hypothesis that Jabba, specifically, would exist until Jabba noticed his existence and then tailored hypotheses to fit that evidence. I contrast, what would have be impressive is if there had been a pre-existing hypothesis that predicted that Jabba, specifically, would exist.
Again, the card analogy. Jabba finds a deck of cards laying on the table and observes they are in the following sequence: JC, QS, 9H, 3H, JS, KH, 5D, 10H, JD, 6S, 5S, 8S, 5H, 7H, 6H, QC, JH, 4C, KS, QH, 3D, 7D, 3C, 9C, 10S, 5C, KC, 3S, 10D, 7S, 7C, 8D, 2S, 6D, AD, QD, 9D, AC, 9S, 2H, 2D, AS, 6C, 8H, 8C, 4H, 2C, 4D, AH, KD, 10C, 4S. He reasons that the probability that a random shuffle would have produced that sequence is 1 in 10
68, but if they were intentionally set in that sequence, then the probability of the sequence would be 1. Therefore, they almost certainly were intentionally set in that sequence. The problem is that there was no hypothesis before the sequence was observed that predicted that that specific sequence would be the set sequence. That was hypothesis was tailor-made after observing the sequence. The hypothesis itself was conditioned on the observed data.
Jabba is committing the same fallacy.
Jabba finds his existence surprising, for the obvious reasons (ancestor X has to be in right place and right time, etc.). Anyone's existence is like winning a fantastic lottery. The reason our existence isn't really surprising is there are a lot of lottery winners (and counterfactually, potential lottery winners). If I wasn't here, there a lot of potential someone elses like me who would be here and be wondering about their existence. Unlike the sharpshooter case, coincidence is an acceptable explanation for existence.
This is where I think Jabba gets it wrong. He thinks his existence is like winning a lottery, where the odds of winning are fantastically remote. OK, fair enough. But, where he goes wrong, is he thinks his winning ticket was the only ticket sold. If that were the case, he would be right to be surprised. If there was a lottery just for you, and the odds were fantastic, and you won, you'd be suspicious. But his ticket wasn't the only winning ticket. There is Jabba(a) who would have won, if the numbers were a little different (if sperm X had made it instead of sperm Y), and Jabba(b), and Jabba(c)...If enough tickets are sold, someone's going to win, no matter what the odds are.
So our existence is surprising, but not in any way that requires an explanation beyond coincidence or luck.[/QUOTE]