Woo hoo, this is almost like reading the Guardian Online!
Common sense tells me to stay out of all this, but common sense isn't rally a precious commodity in today's mad world anyway. Or on this site. So here comes my input.
It does indeed, sort of. Let's take this further. Then if you carry a meter on a string around your neck, then you still have a meter, don't you? So where does this fit into all this, I'm beginning to suspect, obsessive minimal-minimalism?
Maybe we should all agree to carry 120 roll film Kodak Brownies and use the Sunny Sixteen rule. That should satisfy everyone's criteria.
To further complicate things, I have a lovely old (black body) Nikkormat EL I bought new in the 1970s. Meter system rendered up the spirit a few years ago. I can use the EL, but only on one speed,1/90. Can't get much more minimal than that. I often take it out with an equally venerable (circa 1960, so much older) Weston Master V which reads reasonably close to accurate in bright sun, but is all over the place on overcast days, so compounding the margin for error in shooting.
Unless you consider my even older Nikkormat FTN, with its now-and-then working meter, but I long ago gave up putting in batteries as the meter was so unreliable anyway. With an old Nikkor 28mm f/3.5 lens, I keep it set on 1/125 with FP4 and leave the meter in my camera bag, so as a point-and-shoot, it's brilliant.
Will it please the OP if I include my Kodak Retina IIb? Even more so than the E, you can't get more basic than that.
Except for my Retina Ia. Uber-minimalist!
Also the aforementioned Kodak Brownie.
I want a glass of Tasmanian Pinot now.
I note that others have already made comments similar to mine. That's good. Now I feel like I belong...