This Article\u27s thesis is that, by reason of its recently secured independence from management domination, the boards of directors of large American corporations are now in a unique position to make business decisions of the highest quality, and that corporate law should respond to this potential appropriately. On the basis of findings in the behavioral sciences, this Article urges a limited rethinking of the role of the chief executive and the board of directors before the model of directors as monitors of the chief executive\u27s performance is frozen in place. Already armed with information supposedly received as monitors, the independent director group can best employ its limited time by doing what corporate law used to command (an...