Let me give a bit of thought aside @Benjol's answer, at least how I understand it.
Since I'm not associated with SO/SE except for being a user here, this is my personal opinion, nothing else.
The ultimate purpose of the SE system and all the sites is to provide good answers to people, to be the canonical place to find the answer to life, the universe, and everything (ok, perhaps not that, everyone knows that the answer to that is 42.)
But you need to consider how this works in the long term.
Sure, you should strive to provide the best answer to the current question, asked now, by a specific person, for a specific context.
However, in the future, people will be landing on those same webpages through a Google query, wondering about the same thing.
For them, the best would be a single, complete, answer, instead of many smaller ones.
As such, it is actually in the sites best interest that many small, but incomplete, answers are merged into a larger complete one.
At least that's how I see it.
Thus, the reputation earned is actually an incentive to people to make those complete answers. To combine and consolidate, to simplify, to perfect, make it easier for the next person with the question to find the best answer(s).
Does this mean that I've "stolen" other answers myself? Heck yes, though I've been polite (which never hurts) and never just reposted the answers by others, combined. I've always written my own answer, and then if others mentions things I've forgotten or left out, I will happily add the same bits into my own, though I never just copy their text.
Does this mean that I think it is fine that someone else does the same with my answers? Either editing them into CW, taking content (either in idea or verbatim) and combining it into other answers?
Not only is this fine, I expect it, I expect that if someone else posts an answer, and then sees that I have a point they don't have, that they add the same point to their answer.
Provided it is correct of course. If 10 different answers mentions the same thing, it is a strong indication to people reading the page that this is correct.