John Ching Hsiung Wu
John Ching Hsiung Wu was a Chinese jurist and author. He wrote works in Chinese, English, French, and German on Christian spirituality, Chinese literature and on legal topics. A graduate of the University of Michigan Law School, he was the principal author of the constitution of the Republic of China. He maintained a correspondence with U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. and later produced scholarly work examining Holmes' legal thought. Previously a Methodist, he was a convert to Roman Catholicism after reading Thérèse of Lisieux's biography.
Wu served as an adviser in the Chinese delegation to the 1945 United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco and served as the Chinese ambassador to the Vatican in 1947-49. In 1957, Wu was appointed a judge of the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague. After the Chinese Communist Revolution, Wu worked as a professor at the Seton Hall University School of Law in New Jersey until retiring to Taiwan in 1967.Works by John C. H. Wu
- Juridical Essays and Studies
- Some Unpublished Letters of Justice Holmes
- The Art of Law and Other Essays Juridical and Literary
- Essays in Jurisprudence and Legal Philosophy
- : A Study in the Teachings of Thérèse of Lisieux
- Justice Holmes to Doctor Wu: An Intimate Correspondence 1921-1932
- From Confucianism to Catholicism
- Beyond East and West
- The Interior Carmel: The Threefold Way of Love
- Fountain of Justice: A Study in Natural Law
- Justice Holmes: A New Estimate
- Cases and Materials on Jurisprudence
- Chinese Humanism and Christian spirituality
- Sun Yat-sen: The Man and His Ideas
- The Four Seasons of T`ang Poetry
- Zhongguo zhe hsuëh
- The Golden Age of Zen
- Tao Teh Ching
- "Chinese Legal and political Philosophy," in The Chinese Mind: Essentials of Chinese Philosophy and Culture, ed. Charles A. Moore