Functional Equivalence

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Essentially, [[Cosmic Justice]] involves maximal entropy of experience itself and many experiences are identical ([[Functional Equivalence|functionally equivalent]]) despite the broader reality they are part of differing. The exact composition of experiential reality as a whole is determined by what happens to sentient beings and in turn what sentient beings do to one another.
Essentially, [[Cosmic Justice]] involves maximal entropy of experience itself and many experiences are identical ([[Functional Equivalence|functionally equivalent]]) despite the broader reality they are part of differing. The exact composition of experiential reality as a whole is determined by what happens to sentient beings and in turn what sentient beings do to one another.
== Moral Equivalence ==
Two or more possibilities can also be distinct from one another, but when viewed through a [[wikipedia:morality|moral]] lens produce the same ethical directives. As such, these possibilities have '''Moral Equivalence'''.
'''Moral Equivalence''' can be used when summing possibilities in order to determine, for example, what is most moral in a given situation (an [[Ethical Sum]]). Possibilities that are '''Morally Equivalent''' amplify and thus lend additional moral weight to that direction of ethical reasoning.


== See Also ==
== See Also ==
{{seealso|[[Cosmic Justice]], [[Sum Omnia]]}}
{{seealso|[[Cosmic Justice]], [[Sum Omnia]], [[Ethical Sum]]}}


{{Seealsowiki|[[wikipedia:Penrose tiling|Penrose Tilings]]}}
{{Seealsowiki|[[wikipedia:Penrose tiling|Penrose Tilings]], [[wikipedia:Morality|Morality]]}}

Latest revision as of 14:38, 17 September 2025

Functional Equivalence is when two or more possibilities are different in method, action, or constitution but remain equivalent or indistinguishable in crucial aspects.

Penrose Tilings

One way to understand Functional Equivalence is by considering Penrose tilings which are type of aperiodic tiling:

The Penrose tilings, being non-periodic, have no translational symmetry – the pattern cannot be shifted to match itself over the entire plane. However, any bounded region, no matter how large, will be repeated an infinite number of times within the tiling. Therefore, no finite patch can uniquely determine a full Penrose tiling, nor even determine which position within the tiling is being shown. [1]

Despite the total tiling never matching 100% when shifted, the longer the Penrose tiling goes, the more any patterns and larger patterns will arise that match one another.

To put this in terms that are more easily accessible, imagine that you have two simple experiences where someone enters a store. You live through both and cannot determine any difference between the two. As far as you can tell, they are a matching pattern. However, the stars in the cosmos above may be in a different order which you cannot tell, or memories and empirical knowledge about the world that are not being accessed during the experience may differ.

In other words, the total pattern in its entirety does not match between the compared experiences, but the experiences themselves are still functionally equivalent.

Relevance

During discussions of Cosmic Justice or Sum Omnia, understanding Functional Equivalence is helpful. While it is presumed you will ultimately be on the receiving end of any action you deal out, the totality of reality does not have to match between the events for the smaller pattern comprising the complexity of the experience to be equivalent.

Essentially, Cosmic Justice involves maximal entropy of experience itself and many experiences are identical (functionally equivalent) despite the broader reality they are part of differing. The exact composition of experiential reality as a whole is determined by what happens to sentient beings and in turn what sentient beings do to one another.

Moral Equivalence

Two or more possibilities can also be distinct from one another, but when viewed through a moral lens produce the same ethical directives. As such, these possibilities have Moral Equivalence.

Moral Equivalence can be used when summing possibilities in order to determine, for example, what is most moral in a given situation (an Ethical Sum). Possibilities that are Morally Equivalent amplify and thus lend additional moral weight to that direction of ethical reasoning.

See Also

  Infinite Journey: Cosmic Justice, Sum Omnia, Ethical Sum
  Wikipedia: Penrose Tilings, Morality
  1. Wikipedia contributors. (2025, August 30). Penrose tiling. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 14:10, September 17, 2025, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Penrose_tiling&oldid=1308631319
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