I realize that it is trying to communicate with someone who asks for a source, and then, when given one, asks what you mean by it. Not recognizing "I" as a typo for "It" can, I suppose, be put down to not having English as one's first language.
But in this case, one can indeed confidently assert that the Gilbert two-world perspective projection is not suitable for an atlas map of any kind whatsoever. It really is of no use or value for general-purpose mapping. So Piotr is "right" in having doubts about the value of the projection.
And his complaint about the perspective not being adjustable does have some merit. The projection is misnamed. It should be called Gilbert's two-world orthographic projection, of course. However, that is also Gilbert's fault and not yours.
When I said that Piotr was right, why did I put right in quotation marks?
Well, the Gilbert two-world perspective projection is not meant for providing atlases with another map projection which better optimizes distortion properties. Of course, I had the good fortune to first encounter the projection in the famous Mathematical Games article by Martin Gardner on unusual map projections, which discussed the globe in Gilbert's office.
While most map projections are created to optimize distortion characteristics, sometimes a map projection is instead meant to illustrate a point. And Gilbert's two-world perspective projection was intended to illustrate how pervasive use of the Mercator projection has distorted people's ideas about how the world looks - so that a special globe, like the one in Gilbert's office, of which the Gilbert's two-world perspective projection is an image - is often, by the layperson at least, not noticed as having anything "wrong" with it.
So his negative opinion, instead of being "intolerant, a non sequitur", and dismissive of "the projection's better qualities", is merely due to his being uninformed about the purpose of the projection.