I agree that the correct "answer" is to abort calculation. But I don't agree that your over-simplified Prolog phrase manages to encode the paradox in a meaningful way. The best that you are showing is that Prolog can recognize a circular term - which we already know.
It does not prove that, because you haven't shown a success, as I keep stating. Show us how something that's not self-referencing has a different result.
I know. But, you're not giving Prolog "This sentence is not true.", for Prolog to identify that there is a self-reference through some meaningful logic. You are merely providing 2 terms for which unify_with_occurs_check is going to fail. You need to have an example for which you would do this task and expect unify_with_occurs_check to succeed, where you haven't practically given Prolog the answer yourself.
It's not right, though. It's not recognizing "this sentence" as a self-reference. It's just doing its simple job of recognizing that the 2 terms are different yet one refers to the other.
Prolog doesn't hallucinate. Neural nets are not logical, i.e. they pretend to be logical via a gazillion bizarre weightings, rather than logical rules being guaranteed/dependable.
Might as well say that Chalk is false, therefore Cheese is false. Seems completely pointless and uninteresting. More interesting is e.g. Knights and Knaves: metalevel.at/prolog/puzzles
Actually, this example is OK, to show the broken logic from "; true". That includes all of 1, 2, 3, and hence effectively removes the "A = 2" filter. So why would you want to add "; true", and how do you think it helps?
Your logic of: female(Y), ( female(X) -> X @< Y ; true ... means that female(X) does not need to be true. It will also *stop* after 1 match, rather than backtracking. Hence is broken logic.
This original code produces the so-called "symmetry" of X and Y swapped, for which X @> Y is an easy "symmetry-breaking" method, to prevent the "duplicate".
As an example (this will probably show with awful formatting) of how the "; true" alternative affects: ?- member(A, [1, 2, 3]), (A > 2 -> A > 1 ; true). A = 1 ; A = 2 ; A = 3.