Dù Shù 杜恕 (c. 198–252), Wùbó 務伯, was a CáoWèi 曹魏 statesman and political essayist, a native of Dùlíng 杜陵 in Jīngzhào 京兆 (modern Xīān). He was the son of Dù Jī 杜畿 (a Wèi governor of the Hédōng 河東 commandery whose tenure became proverbial for effective administration) and the father of the famous Jìn-period polymath Dù Yù 杜預 (commentator on the Zuǒzhuàn). His biography is preserved in the Sānguó zhì 三國志, Wèi shū j. 16 (杜畿傳附). Dù Shù held a succession of provincial and metropolitan offices — Cavalier Attendant-in-Ordinary (散騎常侍), Imperial Censor (御史中丞), and finally Inspector (刺史) of Yōuzhōu 幽州 — but his outspoken memorialism brought him into repeated conflict with the court, and he was demoted and rusticated to Zhāngwǔ commandery 章武郡, where he died.

His writings — chiefly the political treatises Tǐlùn 體論 (Discourse on the Substance) and Dǔlùn 篤論 (Sincere Discourse) — were widely read in his own day; both survive only as Qing-era jíyì compilations. In the Kanripo corpus he is the attributed author of KR3a0120 Tǐlùn and KR3a0145 Dǔlùn. CBDB has no entry for him.