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.
There's nothing inherent in a statement that makes it true or false. It's just useful to think that way.
I'd say that it's really just somebody vibrating the air, but even that is an abstraction, and has no more real truth than anything else.
Let me rephrase this. There's a reality. The universe is what it is. There are no logical truths. There is not a "1+1=2". There is not even a "there is a reality" or a "there are no logical truths".