For context, i have started playing piano normally a year ago, i knew how to play piano but not the technical stuff, used to to play Pop etc. last year i got hooked on piano. i've played Chopins Revolutionary etude in a concert but it was a disaster because i did not put enough attention to the actual technique etc. now my repertoire is Ludwig van Beethoven's Sonata no. 1, Carl Philip Emanuel Bach's Solfeggieto, and Grieg's Menuet no.1 "Vanished days". if i start now until this year september would i somewhat be able to pull off Scherzo no.2?
I'm getting to this post late, there are plenty of good answers, I'm only commenting because I played this when I was 16 (advanced intermediate, maybe) and am practicing it now, over 30 years later, so I have some perspective...
A) there's nothing wrong with exploring a piece of music that is a few steps beyond your current ability (preferably with a teacher) - a lot will be learned. I learned a lot, and had a lot of fun. I played it for family and friends. Great ego boost.
B) now that I'm much more experienced with advanced music, in hindsight, I would have recommended some Chopin etudes to my 16 yr old self instead of this - - it's a tricky piece to play well, partly because it needs to go fast, wants to go fast, impels you to play fast - and to pull that off you need a very strong technique. You also need a good deal of discipline with tempo control, especially in bravura passages.
This is definitely a young person's piece - the musical ideas are about dazzle - it must have been jaw-dropping to hear in 1836, played by Chopin the Paris salons.
So maybe build your technique more with Czerny (and then Chopin) etudes and revisit this idea in a 2-3 years.