I feel that the Chopin etudes are not there to develop technique but to sharpen your foundation and to prove to you, like a final examination in school, that you can technically play the intricate patterns on the piano and general procedure.
This is exactly what I mean, making use of the technique itself is not trained because the actual useage of the technique, the foundation of the technique should already be established from "easier" pieces you have learnt. Chopin focuses on tricky techniques throughout all his etudes so if your foundation is shaky the entire pieces collapse and become very difficult to master. This would highlight a lack of technical foundation to learn th eetude and one might waste 3 months learning one etude where they could learn many more useful smaller pieces. If you are ready to learn a Chopin etude it should be completely memorised in less than 2 weeks (although I would like to say 2 days, but I think most people here will burn me at the stake and dance around my ashes if I say that.)
There are many issues here that cannot be allowed to go unquestioned:
1. On what authority can you say that the Etudes are not to be used to develop technique, but rather to polish and showcase already developed technique? From your prior posts, I understand that this is how you used the Etudes. Fine, but it does not follow that this is the only proper function of these etudes. Many authorities, including Cortot and Whiteside, have stressed the pedagogical function of the Etudes. The proof of the pudding, however, is that from the time of their publication to the present, countless students have found the Etudes to be a most useful basis for developing technique as well as a source of musical expression.
2. You say that without the technical foundation, the piece would collapse. Well, obviously, but this is true of any piece and does not spell disaster; rather, if the etude is selected appropriately, it should serve to pinpoint the technical problem to be solved. It is precisely the high musical values represented in these Etudes that provides the motivation to solve these technical problems and to signal when they have been solved.
3. Elsewhere you state that ALL the etudes should be worked on concurrently, at least to some depth. This in itself begs for logical support, yet here you state that each etude should be memorised in 2 weeks (or even 2 days, preferably). In other words, in your view, one should be able to memorize
all 24 etudes in 2 weeks of time. Something simply doesn't compute here.
4. Burning at the stake will not clear up the confusion you've created by your statements, so I for one would not advocate it. I would rather you came down from your high horse and be a little more real. Certainly it would be nice to come to the Etudes with a fully developed technique and use these masterpieces simply to polish and show off one's accomplishments, but for most of us mortals, that doesn't comport with reality. I really wonder if it does for you.
Richy