When a user posts a question that is, perhaps unknown to them, a duplicate of a FAQ, the correct response is to close the question as a duplicate of the FAQ, with no other answers to the new question. The new question should serve only as a pointer to the FAQ. The new question is retained because although a duplicate, its different wording adds to the set of variations in the ways of asking essentially the same question, and so might assist later searchers. As I understand it, that has always been part of the design of SE; one of the things that makes it more than just another Q&A site.
(You disagree? Consider that a duplicate question is a kind of closed question, and a closed question may have no more answers. Closing as a duplicate must have the intention that duplicates should not have direct answers)
But that is not happening, at least for a popular tag I am interested in (java), which has many newcomers. Instead, when a duplicate is posted a race begins. Old hands who are trying to curate the site sigh to themselves, find the original of the FAQ and vote to close as a duplicate. Meanwhile, newcomers who know a little more than the OP, as well as overzealous members, rush to answer the question. In many cases the latter win the race, and gain some up votes and one of them gets accepted as the answer.
Just today I saw yet another question that was a duplicate of "is Java pass by reference". I voted to close, but before I had even done that a user with a reputation over 100k had fired off an answer and got an upvote. When I returned to the question a few minutes later that answer had got two more upvotes.
The newcomers who answer the question know no better, and are not the focus of my question. The longer term users who answer these questions are who I want to talk about. They must know the question is a FAQ, so they must have made a conscious decision to answer the question rather than voting to close.
It seems to me they have been bought by the prospect of some easy up votes. This means the gamification rewards of the system are driving the site quality down, rather than contributing to the site.
The gamification reward for answering a duplicate question must be reduced or eliminated. That is, there should be a mechanism for indicating not only that a question should not have any more answers (closure) but should never have received answers in the first place. And when that happens the answers of the question should give no reputation for upvotes (which has been proposed before, but rejected on weak grounds IMHO), or reduced reputation for up votes (perhaps fairer to those who genuinely did not know the question is a duplicate).
I note that the site moderators can not be responsible for doing this, because of the volume of questions and because it requires knowledge of the subject the question is about. Another super power for gold tag holders, perhaps?