I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you *might* have answered your own dilemma by saying:

> The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

 - If it's a *coincidence* A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.
 - Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.
 - Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    This is different from *"providing multiple search terms for the same answer"* (ie. one of important reasons for the existence of duplicates), because it is not the same answer. You can arrive at duplicate's search terms by using thesaurus or playing with grammar - here not so much.
 - Therefore the question is not a duplicate.
 - *something something* duplication is in the subject matter not the question *something something*

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are *coincidentally* identical would still be a good idea, though.

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What I'm trying to get across, is that - if I understand you correctly - you have arrived at an edge case where the guidelines are at conflict:

 - newer question can be answered with a near copy-paste from older question's answer = **DUPLICATE!**
 - newer question is not same as the old question but from different perspective and or wording = **NOT DUPLICATE**

In such situations, I feel one should look at the purpose behind duplicates. I'm neither moderator nor reviewer, but as far as I understand it, duplicates are for:

 - the benefit of answerers - so they don't go mad from answering the same question with the same answer for Nth time, and leave frustrated

 - the benefit of visitors - so they get all relevant information in one single, interlinked glut, will arrive at what they're looking for - regardless of what perspective they have on the problem, and won't have to wade through N grains of sand to find that one pearl

 - the benefit of askers - so they get a slap on the wrist (so they will try better in the future) and luscious, ripe answers without waiting for them - at the same time

If you think marking this edge case as a duplicate is pertinent to these benefits...

... and won't make anyone scratch their head in bewilderment, like this one case where a question asking *"Why is X false?"* was marked as a duplicate of one with all answers saying *"X is always true"* ...

...you should probably do so.