To clarify, I was interested in the number of votes per view on a question. E.g. maybe there were 20 votes cast for 100 views a couple of years ago, and now it might be down to 10.
This is not something we know.
The SE Dev Team probably won't even know this unless they tracked individual view statistics, and I don't think they do since tracking each individual view would take up a ridiculous amount of space. Also, I know the same user can count for multiple views, and if SE was tracking View stats I doubt that would be allowed.
Best case scenario is to find an old data dump, and run a query like this against both the old data and compare it with the same query run against the newer data.
A graph of the current data would look like this :

To clarify the data
- X Axis is date at which questions were Asked
- Y Axis is the total # of Up and Down votes that question received as of today, divided by the number of Views as of today
- The ratio has been multiplied by a huge number to make it visible on the graph
Obviously, questions that have been around much longer have accumulated many more views than newer questions (including repeat-viewers, who can only vote once but can count for multiple views), so they naturally have a much lower VotePerView ratio.
Also, keep in mind deleted questions don't count in this graph, and there is a roomba that auto-deletes any low-scoring questions, which is most likely why the right side of the graph looks so high. For example, this version of the graph only counts upvotes, and the top of it is roughly 0.013, compared to 0.023 in current graph.)