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There is a requirement to provide an answer.
It doesn't explain why life exists,
or why its origin cannot be explained scientifically.
No, there isn't. It is perfectly acceptable to say "I don't know" and there is never any guarantee that we ever will know.
You can't presume a "why". "Why" is a consequence of something bigger (an intention) or more fundamental (a mechanism) than the phenomenon you are looking at, and in the case of life, we have no evidence of intention and no reason to think that it requires more than the known mechanisms of chemistry.
Can you explain why it is acceptable to consider that an answer to the simple question "what is life?" may not be possible?
Why life exists is essentially asking "what is the origin of life?". It has nothing to do with intention per se.To answer the question "what is life?" it may be relevant to know/question how it came into existence / what could explain it (why it exists).
Can you explain why it is acceptable to consider that an answer to the simple question "what is life?" may not be possible? What could validate such an idea?
It doesn't explain why life exists, or why its origin cannot be explained scientifically.
The answer to "why" is "because....." or "in order to...."
As an example, for a long time animal minds have been ignored by science. Animal minds have been considered a "black box" and wasn't given attention and thus people in general didn't know anything about it and cannot understand a problem with treating animals in a specific way (i.e. without respect).