Could a user after a certain reputation get the privilege to view who downvoted or upvoted his/her answer OR is it abstracted intentionally from everyone?
If abstracted what are the reasons?
Could a user after a certain reputation get the privilege to view who downvoted or upvoted his/her answer OR is it abstracted intentionally from everyone?
If abstracted what are the reasons?
No, there is no way to see who voted for your posts. Some (not necessarily all) Stack Exchange employees have the ability to see who voted for a particular post, but even then there are measures to try to shield them from seeing who voted for that employee's posts.
Why? Two (main) reasons.
First, there is no legitimate need for that information. None. You would not gain any information by knowing who downvoted a post that you could then use in any positive way. The secret ballot is valuable precisely because it ensures people feel safe and free enough to vote honestly. (Side note: Stack Exchange employees investigating abuse of the system do have a valid use case for this information. They are the only exception.)
Second, the foreseeable uses are all bad. The least-awful uses are on-site harassment, like pestering someone to change a vote. The worst uses are really scary. Most people who use these sites do so responsibly. Some, however, do not. Even without the ability to see who voted for or against a particular post, some users get so obsessed over internet points that they will abuse other users on the site. Worse, some users have even stalked people off-site based on perceived slights. This has even included real-life harassment, like doxing someone or calling someone's employer to demand that person be fired.
So, no, you can't ever earn this privilege. And no, that's not going to change.
Could a user after a certain reputation get the privilege to view who downvoted or upvoted his/her answer OR is it abstracted intentionally from everyone?
No, there isn't. Even for moderators the direct view isn't available. Stack Exchange employees maybe, but I'm not sure.
If abstracted what are the reasons?
Up- and down-voting of posts is kept as a strictly anonymous action at all the SE sites.
The reasoning most probably is to keep anyone from the Community free with their decisions to vote on a posts usefulness within a Q&A framework (be it question or answer).
That well supports the community driven model for preferring useful Question and Answer pairs over too localized "Halp me plz" problems.