Hmm, had to reread you guys to understand what you argued about

The funny part is that you both seem to agree on that HUP is about the impossibility of a simultaneous reading, of momentum/position for example. So what you seem to be arguing about is how to see a electron staying in its 'probability cloud', if i got it right? My five cents comes here.
As a electron could be seen to 'rotate', if applied from a classical approach (Newton), you then could define it as constantly 'accelerating'. But if it was so it should radiate, shouldn't it? And as far as I know, it doesn't. The only time it radiates is when it changes state ('jumps' between shells). We know that the orbitals are quantized according to the Schrodinger equation into orbitals ranging from lowest (near nucleus) to highest energy (away from nucleus).
As I understands it QM defines it as if was in a 'probability cloud', unable to define it to any specific 'place' in that 'orbital' circumventing the nucleus. Instead it exist in a so called superposition defined by the 'cloud/orbital'.
Assume that you could define it to a specific point (position). If you could you would now have to allow its momentum to become indefinably large (HUP), and so also its 'energy'. As long as it's 'smeared out' around the nucleus it to me seems to be 'everywhere' or 'nowhere' and so also be in a balance, unmoving if you like.
Those 'balances' are quantized into orbitals, separated from other orbitals according to the Pauli Exclusion Principle. The properties of orbitals and their electrons are defined using quantum numbers "Principal, n - 1, 2, 3, defining energy level ; Angular momentum, 0 to n-1 defines the orbital shape ; Magnetic, ml - l to + l defines its spatial orientation and degeneracy ; Spin, Ms ± 1/2 defines the electron spin"
Knowing the orbital, you will know those values, as they defines the' orbital'. So a electron can't 'exist' other than as a probability defined by its orbital, and the orbital, or probability cloud, is a function of the electrons properties. It's a sort of symmetry to me, having nothing to do with how we define something classically. I don't think you can expect the electrons closest to the nucleus to have the most energy, even though I can see how you think there. As far as I know it's the other way around. The further away the orbital, the higher their average 'energy'. But it is a interesting point to make, as you could see it as a 'smaller box' and so increase the 'energy'. All as I understands it.