Update to address your update:
Thanks everyone for the thoughtful feedback. I’ve read through much of it and there are a few things that stand out to me.
No problem. Thanks again for reading our feedback and taking it into consideration. Just imagine if you had built everything ahead of time only to announce it and find out everyone hates it. That would be a disaster.
I should warn you that quantifying a "substantial edit" correctly is probably the hardest thing you will do trying to pull this plan off. I certainly don't expect you to get it right the first time. When you do, please give us as much information as you can and be transparent as you can about it. This isn't as much about "transparency" as it is about helping us to be better curators. Knowing what could potentially get a question reopened automatically can better help us decide what action is most appropriate for a question. And, at the very least, it will help minimize frustration if we know what the system is and isn't capable of doing.
Of course, as always, please warn us when you're about to change something. I'm sure I don't have to say that, but just to be clear: this too will help mitigate frustration if we know in advance.
Which close reasons are eligible for automatic reopens?
I have significantly less objection to the idea that some close reasons will be eligible for automatic reasons and some will not than a blanket automatic reopen which (as you seem to now know) is what it sounded like you were saying. This is simply because a hardware question is less likely to become on-topic with an edit than say a programming question that doesn't give enough data to re-produce the result mentioned. The later could be on-topic given enough to work with, the former is just beyond the scope of our site. The effects of opening the later automatically is probably less harmful if accidentally done incorrectly than the former.
All that said, I actually have less objections to this, but you will have to get it right if you do it. But I'm sure you will before you push it live.
These are questions we're still working through, and your input here as well as our experiments will get us closer to these answers.
So I think what you're trying to get at but aren't asking all the way is why questions get closed. If you aren't asking this, then maybe you should as you continue this process. That certainly seems to be what you're wondering anyway.
Something you should ask yourself is why do we even close questions at all? Like why don't we let the question remain on the site, possibly unanswered, but sill open? It's different for every reason, but most close reasons have a reasoning behind them. It isn't because we want to be mean.
A great example of this is closing because the question doesn't have a minimal, reproducible example (I don't remember exactly what is is called now, as all the reasons changed their names recently, and I haven't exactly committed them all to memory yet). Most questions I find myself closing for this reason is not because I don't want to help the user. Rather, it's often very much because I can't help the user. I don't have access to their code base, much less their environment. If I can't make the problem appear myself, I have no way of knowing what is really wrong with their code. I truly can't help them.
Why do I bring this up? Because on the flip side of this, questions shouldn't be reopened if they still have the problems they started with (or even other problems that somehow get introduced along the way). An edit should fix those problems before opening the question.
Try to internalize the rational of every close reason, and that will help you figure out how to guide the asker to fix the actual problem correctly. It will help guide you what reasons should get a automatic reopening (if any) and which ones should not.
Third, there is always the possibility of a failed test during discovery and experimentation. And that’s okay!
100% agree. In fact, it's likely that you will fail at least once.
It's completely okay to fail as long as you a) recognize that you failed b) learn from your mistakes and c) don't accidentally burn the whole house down by mistake because your experiment failed. Please do a and b. Preferably not c. I'm sure c won't happen, but I just figured I'd throw it on there and hopefully at least make you laugh at me being extreme :D
how can we both educate and help new users navigate their way and encourage them to continue contributing to Stack Overflow, while improving the tools curators, mods, and our CMs use to maintain the site?
I don't envy your job. Thanks for doing it anyway :D
That was long enough to probably be its own answer, but I'll keep it as a part of this one anyway. Okay, on to the original post.
Original Post
First of all, thank you for telling us this in advance. That is an improvement from you (the company) compared to 2019, and I just want to take some time and recognize it and thank you. Keep up the good work.