There are two things I wish to bring to your attention;KK wrote:He has no direct defense. He does have some indirect defenses, though.
His speed is the main one. If he can attack fast enough that the Jedi is forced to defend himself at close range, the Jedi won't be able to use a good deal of TK. At least no more than to boost his physical abilities.
And it's been shown that Jedi do need a deal of concentration to use TK, and he could keep the Jedi occupied enough to not allow him that concentration. Either by blockign webbing, dodging webbing, or anything of the sort.
If he is levitated, he could use stingers to break the Jedi's concentration, or pull a Dooku and use webbing to pull down the ceiling over the Jedi.
It all comes down to a good offense being useless if you aren't fast enough to make the battle fought on your terms.
Here is an example where one Jedi, just flat out overpowered a Dark Jedi and crushed him. And while you would be right in saying this doesn't address Spiderman's speed issue, if it wasn't for the following;I, Jedi, [i]hardcover pages 455 - 456[/i] wrote:"Then Spicewood (Corran's grandfather) dove for his blade and Nightsweat stabbed down. I could almost feel the blade burning its way through my friend, severing the ties his life had to his body. I would have expected him to die instantly, but he managed a smile. The azure blade fixing him to the ground sputtered and died and in an instant I knew what he had done, how he had employed the rarest of all Jedi gifts, and what a terrible price he had paid for it.
Nightsweat rose into the air, then convulsed and seemed to implode. I saw the body fly back through the tents built beneath the duracrete dome. Nightsweat exploded, as did the dark Jedi Desertwind had slain. Their mortal bodies no longer able to contain the dark-side energy, it flashed out in a blue fireball that shattered the duracrete dome.
<snip>
I looked down and saw him (Corran's grandfather) fade away, his burned clothes collapsing, his lightsabre settling into the dust"
So while I will happily conceed that Guri isn't as fast as Spiderman (for now, since I can't remember her speed being defined as anything more substanial that 'supernatural' in the book, although I haven't read it for years), it demonstrates that Jedi do not soley rely on precognition, they can also speed themselves up.Shadows of the Empire, [i]paperback page 359[/i] wrote:
<Snip, Luke is about to be killed by Xizor's assassin droid Guri, he was destracted and is lying on the floor, Guri moves 'supernaturally' fast>
" He had to trust the Force completely-
Guri slowed, as if she were suddenly mired in thickened time. He saw her hand descending, saw it moving to smash him, but it was so incredibly slow, why, he could easily just roll aside and stand, before she ever reached him...
He did so. He felt as if he were moving at normal speed, though there was a crackling feeling to his motion, a sound like a strong wind whistling about his ears.
He came up, pivoted, thrust his open palm against the descending chop, shoved it aside. He used his left leg, a sweep that caught Guri behind the right ankle. Her feet left the floor, still moving in slow motion, and she fell, floated down, hit flat on her back ...
Time speeded up."
So while they couldn't (perhaps) speed themselves to Spiderman level couldn't they speed themselves fast enough to not be in such a precarious dis-advantage?
But all this is really window dressing as I have always maintained that the Force doesn't act towards Spiderman (thus something he could very well dodge), but acts on him. Meaning that it is inherinetly already there.