The main purpose of this site is not to build a perfectly fair reputation system. The main purpose is to build up a collection of knowledge. So let's take reputation out of the equation. It's a tool to reach goals, not a goal itself.
Under that perspective, your proposal of merging nearly identical answers has mainly one benefit:
It cleans up threads with a lot of answers, if you merge identical answers you can find different answers more easily.
Now the question is, isn't that possible with the tools we already have?
We do have (1) community wikis were contributors are encouraged to edit an existing answer instead of creating another one, and (2) answerers can delete their own answers and upvote the other one, in the case that the other is covering the same points or even slightly better.
So what would your proposal change? It would basically do the same as (2) and (1), but it has both it's benefits ...
[+] It would encourage more people to "clean up" answer threads, as they might gain more reputation by merging with a higher voted answer.
... and it's downsides ...
[-] It might encourage answerers to copy existing answers, just to then request a merge (might allow abuse of the reputation system).
[-] Instead of having different perspectives on the same topic, it encourages one right final merged answer (Is there one?). We loose all those nuances.
So all in all, I don't think this is a good idea.
two such answers may both be 'equally correct', 'equally good`, or even 'equally acceptable' to the question's OP.
Sure. I don't see a problem here. The OP got his answer, no matter which one he finally chooses as "correct". And over time, votes will move the best answer to the top.
After all, duplicate questions are vehemently chased down
But duplicates aren't merged, they are linked. Or in other words: Multiple duplicate questions get linked to the same answers. Duplicates aren't "chased down" to remove them, they get ordered. Through the duplicate system, no matter how you word your problem when searching for it, someone used (nearly) the same words before in one of those questions all directing to the same set of answers.