The way SO handles duplicates is unfortunately flawed both by design and by practice. The thoughts from my meta post that you quote originate from several discussions on a different Q&A site, where we are trying to build something better than the current system at SO. The original discussion regarding that can be found here, quoting my thoughts from there:
("Somewhere Else" in the text is a recurring joke referring to Stack Exchange.)
Question closure can leave people feeling judged (as we learned Somewhere Else)
...counter the impression that duplicates are bad
To solve that problem, one needs to address the source. Somewhere Else would instantly make a conclusion like "aha it's the evil community being rude again" and then come up with some misguided system to counter that. But by applying a slight bit of empathy, we can get to the root source:
The people who cast duplicate close votes Somewhere Else are fed up with endless duplicates. Newbies asking the same question over and over again, with little to no research effort made. Therefore the regulars get tired of that behavior and just close the posts without providing much feedback to the person who asked the question.
There exists a somewhat rare phenomenon though: sometimes when a high quality question that is a dupe gets asked, it is left open long enough for good answers to pop up. And when this happens, this new question might actually turn into the "canonical" target for duplicates. And then the old, present duplicates get closed with the new post as target. It's a very good thing when this happens. The old duplicates of diverse quality are not necessarily the best ones.
But most of the time, new questions that are duplicates just get closed with an old post as target, because that's how the system was designed.
Somewhere Else is suffering from the results of this: there's a lot of old posts with canonical status but so-so quality. Also such posts tend to attract a whole lot of answers over time, where everyone and their mother feels inclined to contribute even though they aren't adding anything new. Or in case they are adding something new, they only add that part and not a complete answer. So over time the canonical post "fragments" into several answers and the result as whole is not very good.
It would be better if these old posts were recompiled into complete answers and one natural way to do that is to close them when something better and more complete shows up. But the duplicate system often doesn't let that happen.
We shouldn't close posts as duplicates unless there exists a high quality duplicate target. If a question has been asked before, then that alone should not be a reason to close it.
A perfect example of a post with diverse quality, but with canonical status, is the SO canonical post used for the #1 most frequently asked C and C++ question. That question is along the lines of this one asked just now, asking for the result of combining several i++
operations in the same expression. This question gets asked around 10 times per week or so - it's by far the most common C and C++ question.
The canonical dupe target is: Why are these constructs using pre and post-increment undefined behavior?. The question itself is good with lots of examples, but each individual answer is actually not that good at all. They are individually incomplete and lack detail - in order to truly understand the problem, you have to go through multiple answers, each containing various pieces of the puzzle that makes a complete answer.
A good complete answer to the question would have to address the following:
- Side effects and sequencing/sequence points, with sources.
- Undefined behavior, with sources.
- Bug fixes: how to write the code properly instead.
Looking at the top-voted answers in this post, the top voted/accepted one with +596 is plain bad. It is basically just "this is undefined behavior, don't worry your pretty head about it". Likely it gets massively upvoted because it was accepted and people always refer to the above link out of habit.
The +79 voted one by haccks is a great answer. The +78 voted one with a few quotes is incomplete since it lacks explanation and context. The +76 voted one showing disassembly is plain bad and dangerous. Some good answers by various other resident C gurus follow, though these are also fragmented. One person even felt the need to post two different answers.
So how can we fix this mess? We can't... The proper way if we only care about quality would be to filter out the good question by PiX and the great answer by haccks, then nuke everything else and lock the post. But that's not how we treat posts on SO in general or canonical posts in particular.
Alternatively, someone could make an effort to compile all the fragmented answers into a single great post, perhaps post it as community wiki, have several other domain experts peer review it and then close the present canonical post as a dupe to the new one. This can be done in theory, but in practice it's hard to coordinate several domain experts into such an undertaking.