Most violations of judicial ethics appear to be inadvertent. Aside from the few cases where judges deliberately violate the law or otherwise dishonor their positions, the overwhelming majority do their best to live within the ethical strictures that judging places upon them. Violations persist, however, even among the well-intentioned, for a variety of understandable reasons. First, until recently, relatively little attention has been paid to the subject of judicial ethics. Second, many of the rules governing judicial behavior are of the technical, malum prohibitum variety. Two courts that have had occasion to consider this issue have given us little in the way of useful methodology. Let me suggest as a minimum level of explication for op...