Same Moves, Different Minds: Rashomon Comes to Sequential Decision-Making
A taxi is a useful little trap. It looks harmless: pick up passengers, drive them to destinations, do not run out of fuel. A small grid-world taxi environment is not exactly the sort of thing that makes executives whisper “agentic transformation” over terrible conference coffee. But that is precisely why it works. Strip away the enterprise theatre, and sequential decision-making becomes easier to see. An agent observes a state, chooses an action, receives the next state, and repeats. If two agents always make the same moves and achieve the same objective, most organizations would treat them as equivalent. Same behavior, same operational meaning. Audit passed. Ship it. ...