Actually, you can see this through the revision history, and this method works whether the question has a revision history link or not.
The Easy Situation
If the post has a revision link, this is much simpler. Click the link. On the revision you want the source of, click the "source" link.
This will show you the actual markdown source of that revision.
The Slightly More Involved Situation
As promised, this still works if there is no revision link on the post!
To get to the revision page in this case, grab the URL of the post. If the post is an answer, this is more easily done by grabbing the URL of the share link.
http://stackoverflow.com/a/1732454/2607247
is the share URL for the answer in question. We can replace the /a/
with /posts/
and the /2607247
(which is the sharing user's user id number) with /revisions
. The full format is http://stackoverflow.com/posts/<postId>/revisions
.
Your link will become http://stackoverflow.com/posts/1732454/revisions
which will take you to the revision history, where you can once again click the "source" link, this time of the first revision.
For this meta answer, you get https://meta.stackoverflow.com/posts/335155/revisions for a working example.
The Use Cases
New users learning how to use markdown are less likely to go look at the markdown used on other posts than they are to search the help center, I would assume. There is a help center page that is linked when editing or posting that explains how to use the various bits of markdown. If you have evidence to prove this point false, please do present it. Until such time, I'm going to see this suggested use case as incredibly uncommon.
I would argue that the "curiosity" use case is also not that common. How often do you read an answer and think, "Huh, I wonder how they formatted this post" when you're browsing Stack Overflow? I would assume not that often, and less often the more you understand markdown syntax. I can often figure out now what markdown was used to format something a certain way, for example.
I don't see a lot of reason for the team to spend time making this easier when it's not too hard (though a bit hidden) in the first place, not for these use cases. If you really want this made easier, a user script should be able to do it.