So numerous people have explained to you in depth why it's not a useful idea to just give people rep purely for upvoting posts, so I'm going to ignore the entire body of your question for a second and address purely the title:
How to encourage users to exhibit positive behavior?
There are hundreds, if not thousands, of decisions and intentional aspects of design in the site attempting to accomplish that. We allow users to upvote to encourage people to post useful questions and answers, we give people badges for a wide variety of behaviors that we want them to do, we make behaviors we want people to do easy and convenient, and things that they should probably be doing infrequently or with great care harder (there's a reason that the answer button is way more prominent than the comment button.
We let people close questions that don't meet the site's standards to encourage people to ask good questions. We allow users to flag content that's offensive, rude, spam, or otherwise requiring moderator attention so that the bad behavior can be dealt with and discouraged.
We give people rep for suggesting editing posts that meaningfully improve their quality. We ensure people are recognized for their contributions, both in questions, answers, and edits.
And the list goes on, from major features, down to names of things and wording (which often has quite a lot of thought go into it).
All of these systems that you think are "unfriendly" and "judgemental" all exist because they are there to encourage the positive behaviors that we want. Here, that mostly means contributing towards improving the site as repository of knowledge for all programmers to aid them in their practical professional programming problems (say that three times fast).
Places that don't have those kinds of systems, and that encourage people to do whatever they want, tend to create places where people don't like to be, because the unchecked behavior of many people, without strong systems in place to encourage desirable behavior, can get pretty ugly. There's a reason pretty much any large internet site containing lightly moderated (or entirely unmoderated) user-contributed content is going to have a reputation for having lots of really vile things on it.