Does the automated system consider this case in any sense? My guess is "no" since I haven't found any information about this anywhere yet.
(I'm asking because I personally upvote downvoted questions quite often and wanted to know)
As people ask why I upvote those questions and maybe why I'm asking this, I'll try to clarify it:
I mainly upvote edited questions that have good answers with useful information (and many upvotes) and were heavily downvoted in an early stage and never had the upvotes back again.
Those kinds of questions are probably initially poorly written by new users and thus get the downvotes, but eventually they get good pieces of information through answers that are very useful for other similar new users. That way, the answer gets lots of upvotes while the question still does not get upvotes even if it's already fully corrected and never shows up again as valuable for the community.
So that's why I was wondering if there was a technical reason for this apart from the probable fear that a new user or even any other user has to contradict the community.