If you have already admitted to being a beginner, what experience could you possibly have when making your points I wonder?
very easily said: no one would have probably advised me to start playing Mozart's Turkish Rondo in my first year of studies. I did and I don't regret it one bit. I don't play it perfect, I'm always practicing to perfect it, some rare time I even manage to play it almost completely correct. But I'm very happy to play it the imperfect way I do, for my personal own satisfaction, and I would learn it again if I went back in time. I was playing it slow at the beginning, oh, so slow. But I managed to bring it up to speed, all while learning some other simpler pieces at the same time.
You really really need to understand that other people might have different objectives than you. You wouldn't be happy playing a very slow version of this etude. The OP would. You would prefer to learn faster some easier repertory while the OP would prefer to take more time to learn this particular piece. Your vision and the OP's seem to be very different. So why are you advising the OP according to YOUR own objectives instead of his?
Your final comment on tempo, sums up your misunderstanding of what slow practice is. "correctly at half tempo from there he can practice to bring the speed up"
How do you propose this is done? Just increase a metronome and hope for the best? I can show you countless examples on here of people that will tell you they have 'practiced over and over' but always hit a wall of speed where they try and go faster and it loses all structure.
It worked for me on many pieces. Probably wouldn't have if I tackled pieces way too above my levels, but we don't know for sure what the OP's level is. We're just assuming stuff here.
We must presume by the OP's own admission that they are not ready to actually learn this piece, and I personally could not understand why they would not want to learn difficult pieces that are within their actual skill set and have a real and deserved sense of accomplishment.
I repeat, the OP's ojectives might be different from yours. What you think would give you a sense of accomplishment might not be the same for the OP.
lol, I end with your summary "Everybody needs to start somewhere" .... So yeah I know let's start with the Revolutionary Etude, why not!
Possibly I didn't explain myself very clearly. I didn't say that a total beginner must start with the Revolutionary Etude. I said that everybody needs to start a new piece at a very basic level.
You implied that playing the RE very slowly would be just wrong, while instead playing the RE very slow is simply the very starting point of the process of learning. Once you master it slowly, you can work on it to bring it up to speed. For sure you can say that playing a piece slowly doesn't mean that you can play it fast, but it is definitely a necessary step to playing it fast. I don't think anybody has ever learned playing a piece fast before they could play it slowly.
@mjames: playing it slow doesn't mean you can play it. Of course, it doesn't. It just means that you can play it... slow. Which is exactly what the OP said he would be happy with... So, why advising him not to do it? Different strokes for different folks.
In the end, the OP simply asked advice on how to play a chord, he didn't ask whether he should or should not play the piece, did he?