I don't think you quite understand just how much we actually do know. Life really isn't that spectacular, er actually in many ways its more spectacular than people know as they want to just be "its too much for me to comprehend therefore no one knows and its just magic!", when the reality is we have a pretty damn good idea of ways it could and likely did happen.
Bullshit. Science doesn't even know why proteins fold the way they do or why it's so important for them to fold. Without that information, it is patently absurd to insinuate that scientists "are close" to explaining how life and consciousness have started.
The building blocks of life are amino acids, and we have no clue as to why they form or where they came from, and we're about as close to explaining that as we are to traveling to the center of the Sun.
Granted, I suppose there's some possibility that it amino acids formed randomly over billions of years and then learned how to replicate themselves over billions more years. I'd say the probability of it happening again randomly in nature is about as high as there being some sort of "intelligent designer" who crafted our lives as we know it.
Hell, maybe there does exist a different metaphysical universe parallel to our own where beings far more advanced than we are live. And perhaps their understanding of matter and science is sufficiently advanced from our own that they have the capability to bring life into being. Personally, I like the idea of there being a progenetor race, like in Star Trek.
That's not to say that evolution (or, rather, mutation) doesn't occur. A person would have to be a moron to claim that it doesn't. But discounting that someone (let's call it alien) engineered the first life as a possibility for the beginnings of life on this planet pretty much makes you just as much of a close-minded fool.