The WPs have made comments in the past about how wog science hasn't uncovered any useful knowledge about ourselves. The cult of scientology teaches that we are non-corporeal, god-like beings, that our bodies are just "MEST" and not important, and that you can get another one if the body you're using isn't suitable for carrying out your cult's social dominance activities in this sector of the gaLAXy. This life, all personal things, are almost as unimportant as your body, and less important if you're Sea Org. All major research and literature on human behavior is, to a scientologist, a delusional waste of time.
For most humans, learning something new in behavior sciences like the Milgram experiments, for example, changes how you see authority figures and how you see your own behaviors and beliefs in regard to authority figures. Any one of us could have been the subjects who kept upping the electric shocks, but almost none of us would respond the same way in any new, similar situations after learning the premise of the experiments.
So that research not only taught us something significant and useful about ourselves in general, but it's knowledge that to some extent forces self-reflection in the individuals who learn about it. It's like a tiny drop of enlightenment in the world every time someone learns about the Milgram experiments and who is also not a complete moron incapable of making the connection between the research and their own programmed assumptions and reactions.
That's just one example. Of course you already know all this, but I like posting these comments for anyone else who might be reading.