The 1908 Canons of Professional Ethics directed a lawyer to obey his own conscience. \u27 Lawyers receive similar advice today. Writings on legal practice encourage lawyers to make professional decisions based on their moral values and religious beliefs, as expressed in the familiar injunction: to be charted by one\u27s own moral compass. Underlying this advice is an assumption about the professional norms - namely, that they accommodate, if not contemplate, lawyers\u27 reliance on personal values. This assumption finds some support in the contemporary codes of lawyer conduct, which acknowledge a role for the lawyer\u27s conscience or moral judgment. Yet, it is open to question whether the legal profession\u27s contemporary norms a...