The problem with aggressively closing duplicates (within minutes or hours) is that it diminishes the incentive for fresh and likely better answers.
No, it doesn't. It just ensures that those answers are placed in a more appropriate place, together with the other answers, where they can be seen and evaluated: on the master question.
However, it does diminish the incentive for a bunch of duplicate answers rehashing things that have already been said better by the other answers. This is the goal.
This incentivizes fresh answers because a better answer has a greater chance of being accepted as correct given that there is an active asker eager for answers.
Acceptance of an answer is worth only 15 reputation. Upvotes are worth 10, but you can get an unlimited number of them. Upvotes continue to trickle in on many of my old answers, far outshadowing whatever reputation I earned from the asker accepting them. So although the checkmark is certainly an incentive to post an answer, there is no disincentive to answer the other question.
Additionally new questions, and those with recent activity have more eyeballs looking at them and good answers have a better chance of getting upvotes. Necromancing is thankless.
This is false. Well, part of it is true. The part that says "questions...with recent activity have more eyeballs looking at them". That part is true, and posting an answer to a question counts as recent activity. It bumps up the question in the "active" list and gets eyeballs on it. Those eyeballs are frequently connected to hands that can click the vote buttons. This is, of course, all by design.
Besides, all traffic that the duplicate question gets is being redirected to the master question. Those viewers will see your answer there. There is no net loss.
The other part of your claim that's true is that "good answers have a better chance of getting upvotes". Obviously; that too is by design. If you post a good answer, it is likely to be upvoted. But it doesn't matter which question you post that good answer to. So post it to the master question, where people can find it, not one of the many duplicates. There's no point in having good answers scattered all over the place.
"Necromancing" is far from thankless. Well, it is, but only actual necromancing. Answering questions more than 60 days old can be rather rewarding. We actually award a Necromancer badge to reward people who answer "old" questions.
The truth is, I hate that people call this "necromancy". Necromancy is the use of magic to communicate with dead people. When you answer a question, you aren't using any magic, you're just using your brain. And there's no such thing as a "dead" question. Questions and answers aren't like people or foodstuffs; they don't age or go bad as time passes. Frankly, I don't understand how this philosophy of ignoring and neglecting "old" questions developed. I understand it comes from the traditional online forums, a model that we have explicitly abandoned. But even there, I don't understand how it ever made any sense. Why does everything need to be revisited and duplicated periodically? It certainly doesn't make the Internet a better place.
If you have something to contribute, contribute it.