Some people can write just vomiting out a draft. I couldn't do it that way. As Bill or someone said, our brains work in various ways so the same process won't work for all of us. But I also think that the fact that we now can easily edit as we go because we write using a different technology (or most of us do) encourages us to do that. I see no reason not to go back and fix as I think of it. For me, it doesn't take more time than searching for what I meant to fix later. But that's me.
Me too. I edit what I wrote last session before beginning writing new. But I also go back and fix anything as it comes up. For example, I changed a character name last night. A quick find-replace later, and its done.
Hemingway couldn't easily go back and redo what he wrote yesterday. I am more thankful than I can say for wordprocessing.
Anyone who wrote by hand, or by typewriter had the draft method forced on them. The advent of computers and word processing changed all that for the people who started writing with them.
I see the whole multiple drafts thing as typewriter mentality.
WP mentality is fixing as you go, tweaking as you go, adding in as you go, and editing as you go. The first full read for me usually involves extra stuff going in, but it's all in the way of embellishment and explanation, rather than changing anything already written. I rarely ever take stuff out.
While some may consider each pass I make as a draft, I don't. The only time something becomes a draft is if it serves as the starting point for something new, such as a second edition. And I've only done 2 of them. Technically, my book 6 novella could be considered a draft, since it was rewritten as a novel, but since the novella version sells just as well as the newer novel, it isn't really.