It is known that all functional languages share some basic properties like using functions as basic building block for programs with all the consequences like using recursion instead of iteration. However, some fundamental differences also exist. Lisp uses a single representation for both Lisp code and data, while ML has no standard representation of ML code. Erlang has a built-in actor-based concurrency. Haskell has monads. Haskell makes a distinction in the static type system between pure and impure functions; ML does not.
What are the distinctive fundamental differences between other functional languages (Clojure, F#, Arc, any other)? By fundamental I mean something which influences the way you develop in this language, and not for example, whether it is integrated with some wide-spread runtime.
Off the top of my head:
Only the first two items are really unique to functional languages (i.e., almost all imperative languages are eager and impure).