Accepting an answer discourages more answers.
You're stating this as fact, and yet the link doesn't really demonstrate that. In my experiences having a high quality correct answer to the question will sometimes disincentivize additional answers, and it's possible that there is *some effect of accepting an answer, but that link doesn't really definitively indicate this. And of course what we really care about is whether accepting an answer significantly decreases the odds of an answer of higher quality than all of the existing answers being posted, over the same answers being there but not being accepted. It may be the case, but I don't think we have enough information to say definitively either way.
SO has a growing Fastest Gun in the West Problem.
You're linking to a description of the problem from eight years ago. This problem isn't really notably different now than it was then.
SO is suffering from Duplicate Question Infestation.
Agreed. How does preventing people from accepting an answer for even longer address this concern?
More time to close as duplicate before an answer is accepted focuses resources on better questions.
How does making it take longer to accept an answer help questions get closed as a duplicate more quickly? It's not like the duplicate needs to be closed before an answer is accepted either. Ideally duplicates would be closed before answers are posted (to avoid people spending time/effort repeating answers, and spreading out the useful information in those answers over more questions), but waiting to accept an already posted answer doesn't really impact this.
All the above discourages true expertise and encourages rep farmers.
How does making those rep farmers waiting 15 minutes to get their rep address the problem? I know many of them are impatient, but I don't think they're that impatient that waiting an extra 15 minutes to get some of the rep is going to stop them from low quality answers.
Asking a good question is difficult and requires time-consuming effort. Waiting for and sparing time to understand solutions often require a similar effort.
The question is, are the people that take the time to post those types of answers any more likely to do it if the OP needs to wait an extra 15 minutes to post their answer? My experience with the types of people that post answers like these, spending considerable time to write them, they're not too concerned, both because they know that there are decent odds of the accepted answer moving to theirs after they post it, if their answer really is that good, that it's likely to get lots of upvotes, which tends to have a greater impact on reputation than accepted answers anyway, and (most importantly in my mind) these types of users tend to simply not be as concerned about reputation at all. The users that spend a lot of time crafting a really high quality answer typically aren't doing it for the rep, so changing the rep incentives is unlikely to have significant impacts on them.
Encouraging slower answering will yield better quality and a larger number of answers, and via a feedback loop you will get better questions.
Given that this would only affect acceptance, and not voting, there's still large incentives to post an answer more quickly, so that isn't really going away. Additionally upvotes an earlier answer gets over a later answer will move it closer to the top of the page, increasing the odds that it gets accepted when the minimum time is hit, so posting earlier still even increases one's odds of having their answer accepted, if that's what an answerer is worried about.
So all in all I'd say that the problems you've identified are accurate enough, but your proposal doesn't seem quite as likely to have the effect on those problems that you've described.
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. (Usually, it's on simple duplicate questions)