The purpose for making the stuff (guns) is to use it for it's intended purposes... why have something as fine as a 52 and not enjoy it? Why would anyone hide a gun away in a safe to be sold at an estate sale for half price? All you gotta do is take care of it and you wont loose anything on your investment.
Not my intention to split hairs, but I will disagree slightly.
There were a lot of "results" when S&W developed, released and produced the Model 52. It instantly became a serious competition pistol, it became the centerpiece of a lot of interest and press and it quickly became the flagship semi-auto that displayed the skill of a manufacturer that had previously been known as a revolver maker.
However, there was
one true purpose beyond all others for Smith & Wesson to make the Model 52:
sell pistols
And that they did. And when anyone offers a (now long out of production) Model 52/52-1/52-2 for sale, they also have one intention beyond all others... and that is to sell the firearm.
The true "purpose" of any Model 52 (or any handgun) is what the buyer makes of it. We may all have opinions and ideas but not a one of them is the correct answer.
I've had as many as three 52's at one time and I happen to be at two right now, and as sure as I'm typing this, there will be more 52's in my future, God willing. Of the two I have, one comes with me on 95% of my range trips since the day I got my hands on it. I've also taken it 1,200 miles west for hunting twice. I shoot it a lot and I love it even more than I shoot it.
My other one was shot a lot until I got my second one. Then I cleaned it up nicely and now it lives in the safe. It comes out OFTEN and gets handled but it has only made a single range trip since I got my second one. I have no plans to shoot it again any time soon.
I love these 52's and I also love discussions on them, almost no matter what the discussion entails. At the same time, reality cannot be denied-- the pistol itself it a small, hand-operated machine and it has no reason or purpose beyond what the owner wishes to do with it.
I'm sure if we cataloged every Smith & Wesson owned by all participants of this forum, we would find -MANY- that bask in the fluorescent light of collector and display shows, and don't get taken out for range days. There is no crime in this.