Dave Rogers
Bandaged ice that stampedes inexpensively through
He has, but you have to put on your rhetorical hiking boots to get there.
Jabba's case, as you may know, is the classic reversal that embodies a false dilemma. Many fringe theorists choose not to prove their theory, but instead to falsify the prevailing narrative and hold their theory therefore true (or at least more probably true) by default.
Jabba wants to prove he is immortal. But he can't do it directly, so he wants to falsify the notion that we are mortal. In his words, that we each have at most one finite life. (There are a multitude of problems with just that, but that's how he phrases it.) He calls this H. If he can prove that P(H) is very, very small, then P(~H) must be very, very large since P(H) + P(~H) = 1.
Yes, I know that. But mathematically speaking, his entire Bayesian argument that P(H) is very small rests entirely on the premise that P(E|~H) >> P(E|H). That's yet another thing he hasn't made a serious attempt to justify.
Dave