Shalma Wegsman is a "writing fellow" at Quanta magazine. I told her some really cool stuff about Noether's theorem, which goes beyond the stuff you always hear. She understood it, was excited about it, and seemed to want to explain it. Alas, her article doesn't mention any of that stuff. At the end it says

“There’s a lot we have left to learn by thinking hard about Noether’s theorem,” the mathematical physicist John Baez said. “It has layers and layers of depth to it.”

But none of these layers of depth are actually discussed. 😿

It turns out she was only allowed 800 words for a short explainer. It's a pity that every pop science explanation of Noether's theorem stops at roughly the same point... just where things are starting to get really cool.

Indeed, there's a lot of cool stuff that science journalists don't discuss. This is why I do my own science popularization. This is why, most times when I read a pop science article, I need to go the paper they're discussing, to get the really juicy stuff.

The *good* news is that Wegsman explains time translation symmetry, and she says Noether's theorem only works for theories described using a Lagrangian.

(I gave her an example of what goes wrong when your theory *isn't* described using a Lagrangian.)

https://www.quantamagazine.org/how-noethers-theorem-revolutionized-physics-20250207/

For my take on Noether's theorem, go here:

https://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/noether/

This is pretty technical, but Wegner helped me figure out a simpler explanation. Maybe I should give a talk about it sometime.

How Noether’s Theorem Revolutionized Physics | Quanta Magazine

Emmy Noether showed that fundamental physical laws are just a consequence of simple symmetries. A century later, her insights continue to shape physics.

Quanta Magazine

@johncarlosbaez I've talked with Hannah Fry about this. She explicitly bargains with the producers to let her put "Real Maths" in some of her programs, but then has to put in various bits of "Content Free Fluff"[0] to balance it.

Those who ultimately control the content usually don't understand the deeper content, and don't want to scare their readers/viewers.

[0] Not her words.

@ColinTheMathmo - yes, I've pretty much given up on mass media treatments of science for the reason you say. The headline, a few sentences, and I'm off to the original papers.
@johncarlosbaez @ColinTheMathmo So have I given up, a few of my friends send Quanta stuff every now and then and even if I open them I just go straight to the source links. Especially with the current climate of Hossenfelder, Wolfram et.al, I really don't want people to do such a job of "publicizing" physics. There are many ways of communicating the beauty in physics, this way is the least meaningful yet the most profitable in terms of commodification of "content".