Lù Shùshēng 陸樹聲 (1509–1605), Yǔzhāng 與章, hào Píngquán 平泉, was a late-Míng official and scholar from Huátíng 華亭 (Sōngjiāng 松江, modern Shànghǎi). He passed the jìnshì examination in Jiājìng 20 (1541) and rose through the Hanlin Academy and the Board of Rites to serve eventually as Minister of Rites (Lǐbù shàngshū 禮部尚書). He resigned from office multiple times due to court factionalism and spent extended periods in retirement at Huátíng. He was known for his moral seriousness, integrity in office, and association with the Tàizhōu 泰州 school of thought in its later, more sober form. He lived to approximately 96 suì, one of the longest-lived major officials of the Míng dynasty.

CBDB records him at personid 33843, with dates 1509–1605. His principal work in the Kanripo corpus is the Qīngshǔ Bǐtán 清暑筆談 (KR4k0059), a miscellaneous notebook of retirement reflections on cosmology and natural philosophy. He also left a collected works and correspondence.