I often come across excellent philosophical questions that the experts on Stack Overflow would be well-positioned to answer. However, the SO format guidelines require specific questions related to a specific problem, and general architecture and philosophical questions are to be avoided (note that this does not preclude philosophical answers - to the contrary).
While there are a plethora of questions that are not well-formed, with some tweaking they could be good gathering points for learning about good architecture by example. Other questions ask for recommendations on using a specific tool, and some of those questions (and answers) have the highest up-vote totals I have seen.
It seems to me that partitioning out questions to multiple sites only ensures that the crop of qualified experts that would best be able to answer such questions is diminished, thus reducing the overall quality and quantity of answers. Therefore, I want to understand the rationale of these limitations in an effort to be a better contributor to the sites.
We already have a good system in place via tags to filter down questions to topics that are relevant to you. Why the additional partition, which adds an order of magnitude of complexity required to browse relevant questions?
As an example, I was recently confounded on how to distribute my UI buttons evenly across the window. Googling "distribute buttons evenly wpf" yields, as its first result, this answer from Stack Overflow. Now, I figure this question is off-topic; however, the answer was exactly what I was looking for and found it on the first try.