Experience can be used to justify this, in many different ways.
Perhaps you have experience of seeing rocks. Even if you haven't seen 65 rocks in your life (that's only 7,776, so it's very possible you have!), you have seen a decent proportion of that number, and none of them were probably even similarly-shaped to yourself. If 1 in 7,776 rocks looked exactly like you, many more should look similar to you, based on your experience that rocks don't have drastically different shapes to each other. So your experience of seeing enough rocks, none of which look like you, tell you that this would be more improbable.
Perhaps you have experience of reading newspaper articles (or watching YouTube videos, etc.) about improbable events which have occurred. You might have seen some examples like "this cloud looks exactly like the virgin Mary", or so on, with a photo showing a cloud which does look quite like the virgin Mary. If the similarity in that case is notable enough to report, then it can't be a very common occurrence. On the other hand, "this man rolled five sixes in a row" doesn't match with your experience of things which were improbable enough that their occurrence was noteworthy. So, your experience of reports of improbable occurrences tells you that this would be more improbable.
Perhaps you have experience of seeing people, all of whom look different enough to tell them apart. If you have seen 7,776 people who all looked different, and you know there are many more people in the world, your experience justifies a belief that there are many more than 7,776 people who look different. So even if every rock looked exactly like some person, there would still be only a one in several billion chance that a given rock looked exactly like you in particular.
Note that none of these arguments justifies any belief that the probability of such an event is some particular number. Rather, they justify your belief that this probability is less than some other probability. It's usually a lot easier to compare two things and determine that one is less probable than the other, than it is to mathematically determine the exact probability of each event. But a comparison ─ that one probability is less than another ─ is all you have asked how to justify in this question.