>>11280549The Epicurean Paradox relies on one crucial thing given as fact which is not actually a fact: that evil exists.
Good and evil do not exist. What is good for myself may be evil for another person.
A sheep may see a wolf as an evil enity for lurking around to try and kill a sheep, even though the wolf most likely harbors no evil intent towards the sheep. It is simply hungry and the sheep are easily avaible prey.
Likewise, a pig may see the farmer taking care of it as a benevolent entity for feeding it and caring for it, despite the fact that the farmer is raising the pig to be butchered in a few months. This doesn't make the farmer evil, because he is doing what is good in his sight (feeding his family by raising the pig to be slaughtered.
What is good to one, may be evil to another.