Since the details of the post-ban algorithm are secret, and we don't know how many factors can impact the end result, or their relative weights, it's hard to say yea or nay to the proposal.
But putting that aside for the sake of argument, I can see how it would make sense to adjust the algorithm to ignore (or if not ignore, at least reduce the impact of) older questions, e.g. anything older than 12 or 18 months.
While from a system perspective the post-ban is not a punishment, subjectively it can feel so, in very practical ways.
Not having a "statute of limitations" for past deeds and having them always kept hanging over the head of an account seems like a poor recipe for "rehabilitation".
The desired end result should be, in my opinion, that a user learns what the site is about, what the quality metrics that the site prizes are, and finally starts producing quality content.
Additionally, my argument for adjusting the post-ban to weigh recent history much more heavily than older questions comes from the opposite perspective than the one in your question.
While your argument is mainly to give more opportunities to banned users to finally become productive site members (a laudable goal), I also think that the algorithm can be way too lenient on users above certain reputation thresholds.
A user above a certain reputation threshold can publish as many badly received posts as they want, and (as far as I can see) will never be on the receiving end of the post-ban.
I've seen users in the multi-thousand range post dozens of badly received questions to no effect, cases that would certainly place a question-ban on a new user posting the same questions as their first posts.
I don't think it's fair nor useful that a user can continue posting bad content consistently and be above the algorithm simply because of the effect of "past contributions", whatever they may be.
If the post-ban algorithm considered only their contributions within (say) the last 12 months, I'm convinced many of those users would at the very least receive a quality warning, if not more.
In comparison, I like how the flag-suspension algorithm works, where it seems that only a couple of declines can already produce a stern warning, and not many more (in a short time frame) will put you in flag-jail for a couple of days, even if you have thousands of "helpful" flags in your past history.
Or the review-suspension mechanics, where even for automatic suspensions the periods are scaled up and down as time goes by.
In addition to the suggested "take only the recent-ish history" into account, I believe the post-ban could also be adjusted using ideas from these mechanics.
In essence:
- Using mostly recent post history as the deciding ban factor.
- Making it easier to get both in and out of the ban for users of any reputation level.
- Escalating "bans". As well as making it easier and more universal to get post-throttled, these throttles should escalate with repeat offences.
I think that something like this could be more useful both in allowing new users to actually become good Stack Overflow citizens, and in reining in high-reputation users that for some reason managed to accrue a lot of points without really learning what the community considers to be a good, useful post.
Of course, since we are talking about a mechanism that is secret, and that is meant to be secret, there are many details unaccounted for. I'm not dwelling on those deliberately because of these unknown unknowns.