The only thing that remains are answers that are not ideal, pieces of code that work, but they are not very performant/elegant or are not representative of how people usually write it … You get the idea. These answers aren't really bad,bad; they are just not the best you could imagine. The only thing we want for them is to not appear first, thus the "downvote". The downvote says "ok, this answer isn't bad, but there is a better way" (at least that's how I use it).
Words are very important and when you "downvote" an answer it's necessarily negatively perceived by the other. I mean it has "down" in it, how. How could it be positive or even neutral? The same goes with the icon associated to it, a down arrow, that's. That's maybe one of the worst possible imageimages you could have in your head. (Changing the name of answer'sanswers' downvote would inevitably come with rethinking the icon.) We are empathetic creatures, and if we don't like "down-stuff" we don't use "down-stuff" on others. That's why downvotes are so rarely used.
Rewarding someone will not turn him/her into a "monster", so that's probably not a viable solution either. Getting -1
rep is nothing compared to the risk of causing pain. Most people probably don't care about the -1
, unless maybe people that don't tend to ask/answer questions. If you hate receiving downvotes, you wontwon't give downvote,. It is as simple as that. (I'm sure we could observe a correlation between the two.)
In general I think we should also invite people to interact more with other people'speoples' answers (quoting/answering problems from other questions). But that's another topic.