Please do not vote -- in either direction -- without being a confident judge of the contents of the answer. This doesn't mean you have to be an expert, but you do have to be able to understand what the answer is saying, how it applies to the problem (though not necessarily the problem in the question -- you might have a slightly different problem), and whether it's a good or bad contribution to solving the problem*.
If you don't understand the answer, but vote on it anyways, then I think you're misleading future readers. We use post score to say something like "This is good. This is information that you want or need. It will help you get where you're trying to go", and post score is just the aggregate of all the votes. If you vote without being able to make that statement, you're diluting the signal derived from the judgements of everyone else who voted.
*I use "problem" fairly loosely here: you might not have busted code or even any particular task you're trying to perform. You might have a more general, speculative question like the one Carpetsmoker linked above. There's still an answer you can explicitly evaluate before voting.
chmod 777
thread, but many other examples can be found).