This might seem as a recursive matter; also I'm mostly relating to the IT sites of SO, but this might involve other sites too.
I'm a musician and a teacher and, in my experience, answering to questions is a very good way to learn things. I'm not a professional programmer, but I enjoy coding; in the last years I think that I've got some experience that can be helpful for others, and, in the same way, it can be useful for me too. Going back to the recursive reference, my acquiring of experience can be useful to other people too, and so on.
Answering on StackOverflow is not should not be a race, and I really am not interested in ratings (as a famous musician already pointed out, «Competitions are for horses, not for artists», and I think that coding can be some form of art). But.
I noticed that there are some skillful users that seem to spend most of their time answering questions in SO, usually in the matter of minutes.
While from the "basic" point of view this is actually helpful for the current OP, I have to admit that, from an "external" learning point of view, this can be sometimes annoying, as it is not as "engaging" as it could: I see the answer, I concur with it, let's move on.
I'm following some traditional mailing lists that have much slower response time, and I realized that I've actually (actively) learnt more from the answers I gave there than from here.
Don't get me wrong. I really am grateful to those users, as they usually offer useful answers (even if, sometimes, they are too much succinct), but I really have the feeling that that amount of quick-answers might not be a real advantage in the "whole picture" meaning of learning that SO might point to.
As said, I'm not a programmer, and I've not that much time to dedicate to SO, but I think that there's plenty of professionals (and "normal" people) who could even improve their skills as much as me, if there was more possibility and engagement to do so: if you see an interesting question with a given answer, it's "learning level" is not as high as answering it by yourself.
As a teacher, always willing to learn, I usually try to let my students give their own answers first, expecially from group lessons, as I think it's a meaningful way to learn new things and new way to look at things, for them and for myself.
So, my question is actually a meta-mix of questions (we're on meta, right? ;-) ).
How do we relate to those users?
Is the purpose of SO to just give answers to people asking them? Those people reply in a correct (and usually insightful) way, but this just creates finite answers, not compelling ones.
Shouldn't be here room for other people answering, and with "room" I also mean "time to answer"?