Give me some, any, evidence for life elsewhere. That's what this is about, though you seem to be finding some difficulty following. You usually attempt to side-track: so, in simple English: s h o w s o m e e v i d e n c e.
There isn't any.
I've said so repeatedly, on this thread and on others where this issue has arisen.
That being the case I don't know why you're struggling as much as you obviously are.
What I've also said - and if you didn't get the point about there being no direct evidence, you won't have grasped this either - is that there's a fairly clear and comprehensive definition of life as we know it, in fact a definition so workable that as far as technology c. 2015 allows we've been able to look for it for the past few years.
So we have (a) a definition of the kind of life with which we're familiar and (b) the means of beginning to look for it beyond Earth and (c) indirect evidence that the basics of life as we know it are not unusual extra-terrestrially and (d) a strong probabilistic argument, drawing on sound science (i.e. astronomy; cosmology; biology; astrobiology etc.), that life of some sort is almost certain to exist elsewhere in the cosmos other than on Earth.
Everything that goddists don't have, in other words.