"Enthusiast" can be interpreted as including "amateurs and complete newbies", i.e. there is no discrimination at all when we define the site's target audience.
I agree that enthusiast can include amateurs and complete newbies. Indeed, I hope that it does! However, that one is a programming enthusiast also implies that one is enthusiastic about programming. The quality and tone of some of the homework questions is clearly not that of one who is enthusiastic about programming.
What does an enthusiastic programmer look like?
Those enthusiastic about programming may still have some low-quality questions, but they will respond positively to requests for clarification; after all, they'll want to share what they're working on and learn more about it, and won't simply be asking for code.
Those enthusiastic about programming might not yet know about all the resources available to those who have been in the field for a while, but just as someone enthusiastic about a game may read lots of guides, reviews, etc., it's reasonable to expect that someone who is enthusiastic about programming will have already encountered Stack Overflow, and will have already come across some questions in their languages and topics of choice. They might not know about a resource, but an enthusiast, when pointed to some great documentation will say, "Wow, I had no idea this existed — the link from Google was broken, thanks!" It doesn't mean the question was much better, but I hope that there'd be less perception that “Stack Overflow people are mean.”
An enthusiast might not understand why something doesn't work, but they'll have hypotheses. The quality of these might be terrible, but they'll be there, and they'll be there for a reason. I have, for instance, a very hard time imagining anyone who would qualify as a professional or enthusiast mechanic asking a question about an automotive problem and only saying "it doesn't work". They'll tell you what they hear, how it feels, whether it happens at all speed, high speeds, low speed, just after it rains, only when their mother-in-law is in the car, and all sort of other things that may or may not have anything to do with it. Humans are exceptionally good at problem solving, and are great at finding patterns and correlations even when there aren't any! Someone with absolutely no curiosity about a problem is hardly showing typical human behaviors; not mentioning hypotheses or other thoughts about the problem is apathetic at best.
…more examples as I think of them… :)
Based on the comments, I think we may have hit on an tentative description of who Stack Overflow is designed for that captures both "programmers and enthusiasts":
Stack Overflow is for the kind of person who has spent a long day trying to find an answer to a programming problem, but still hasn't found an answer.
I think this aligns well with https://meta.stackexchange.com/q/182266/225437 and this answer to it.
How do we respond to enthusiastic programmers?
I think the level of enthusiasm demonstrated by question askers probably influences the kinds of responses they get. Sometimes a lack of enthusiasm is met with more antagonism than it should be, and that is a problem.
That said, I think that off-topic questions asked by enthusiast, but new programmers, are often met with more forgiveness. For instance, in the RDF, SPARQL, and other Semantic Webbish tags, there are plenty of users who are interested in some new technology and are looking for help or wondering how this technology might be applied in their domain. As an instance I came across a few minutes ago, this is a reasonable question asked by a reasonably high-rep (~2500) user: RDF Inference Engine application. I think it's too broad or unclear as it's stated, but it's clearly someone who is at least a little bit enthused about what they might be able to do. I tried to respond reasonably graciously, and with a request for a more specific problem. It's the kind of question that I'd like to see made better and would like to see (or write) an answer to.
On the other hand, https://stackoverflow.com/q/19493196/1281433 is a question that doesn't sound so enthusiastic to me. The question sounds like a simple request for code without much attempt to investigate. I don't like this question as much. I realize that the quality of the writing in these two questions is very different, and I hope I'm not simply prejudiced by that, and that one of these is a better example than the other.
Should "professionals and enthusiasts" be qualified?
I don't think that it would hurt at all, but I also don't think that qualifying it will help very much. I don't think that all that many people read that section before posting questions. I expect that the portion of the help center describes the site as it is, not that the site has become what it is because people have read the help center and abided by it. Now that it does describe the site, it's a useful place toward which to point people who need to know what the site's about, but I don't think that clarifying what "enthusiast" means will make much difference in those cases. That is to say, I don't think it's a realistic idea to expect that someone would read the help center, realize "oh wow, I'm actually not very enthusiastic about this whole programming thing; I really need to do more ground work as if I enjoy it (or were getting paid for it) and rephrase my question."