I think your post contradicts the falsifiability aspect of science which make probabilities part and parcel of science.
My post in no way contradicts the falsifiability of science - if it weren't falsifiable, in principle, it wouldn't be science. It does question the possibility, at the current time, of having sufficient information to falsify particular scientific claims, but that's a qualitatively different think, not just quantitatively.
Certainly the probabilities of certain values in science are accessible.
Certain values, yes. Not, however, the ones that would need to be relied on in order to make a judgement about the improbability of the universe, let alone about phenomena which are barely understood and not even particularly clearly defined yet, like life and consciousness.
O.