Graham Priest discusses The Liar's Paradox for a NY Times blog. It seems that one way of solving the Liar's Paradox is defining dialethei, a true contradiction. Less Wrong, can you do what modern philosophers have failed to do and solve or successfully dissolve the Liar's Paradox? This doesn't seem nearly as hard as solving free will.
This post is a practice problem for what may become a sequence on unsolved problems in philosophy.
Mind explaining why? I don't see any reason it's any more true than it is false.
Hmm. I was going to say "assign it the value of true, and it returns true. Assign it the value of false, and it returns a contradiction", but on reflection that's not the case. If you assign it the value of false, then the claim becomes ¬(A is true), so it returns false.
So I was wrong - the proposition is a null proposition, it simply returns the truth value you assign to it. I don't know if ambiguous is the best way to describe it, but 'true' certainly isn't.
edit: perhaps cata's 'trivial' is a good word for it.