I vote NO!! Don't destroy it. However, it should not be too much problem to locate and acquire a non-working or "for parts only" model that you could tear up. <g>
I'm the proud owner of an HP-41CX (that I still use). I had an HP-41 (with extra memory modules) from 1980 until 1994 when I absent-mindedly left it in a hotel room. The engineering and design of the calculator itself was, of course, a thing of true beauty. But also impressive was the documentation. The 41-CX had, in addition to the quick start guide, a two-volume manual spanning nearly 400 pages. Everything was laid out clearly. Not only operation of the unit, but the programming as well. One who had no computer programming experience could, by learning to use this calculator with that manual, get a very good foundation in programming concepts.
My office at the time had the competing high-end calculator made by Texas Instruments. I can't remember the model number, but in order to get alphanumeric on it, you had to plug it into a larger units (approximately the size of a small portable typewriter) and it would print the information on a paper tape roll. Not just the results, but the interactive alphanumeric prompts, etc., as well. But without that extra unit, you had to rely just on the numbers in the display (red LED's if I remember correctly). Still, to me that was impressive at the time, and I was thinking of buying one for myself. A colleague dissuaded me. He loaned me his HP-41 and manuals for a weekend and, as he predicted, by the time I came back on Monday morning, I was sold on the HP. Went out and bought one at lunch time that day, and never gave the TI model another thought!
I still use my HP-41 today. It sits on or near my desk, and I grab it when I want to do quick calculations. I have newer calculators, but truth-be-told, I am all but helpless without Reverse Polish Notation. <g> Except for an occasional nostalgia fix, I don't run programs on it any more, basically because it is slow. The kinds of things I sued to use the HP-41 to solve, that would in some cases take the better part of a minute and occasionally longer, can usually be had instantaneously today with the single click of a mouse on some web site. But I am nevertheless still in awe of the accomplishment that was this calculator.
-- Bob, KY3R