Conference

Philosophy of Water and Water Management in Early China

27 - 29 September 2025
Aarbergerhus
Hauptstrasse 19, 2514 Ligerz, Switzerland

Speakers and discussants

Attilio Andreini - Ca’ Foscari university, Venice
Wolfgang Behr - University of Zurich
Vera Dorofeeva-Lichtmann - CNRS
Thomas H. Hahn - Berkeley University
Lisa Indraccolo - Tallinn University
Richard King - University of Bern
Samira Müller - Heidelberg University
Michael Nylan - Berkeley University
Francesca Puglia - University of Bern
Dennis Schilling - Renmin University, Beijing
Roel Sterckx - University of Cambridge
Rafael Suter - University of Zurich
Anders Sydskjør - University of Zurich
Tai Ran - University of Zurich
Minghan Wei - University of Bern

Abstract

This international workshop offers a multi-disciplinary exploration of shui 水 (“water,” “river”) in early Chinese philosophical literature. Shui served as a root metaphor for key concepts such as dao 道 (“way”) and wuwei 無為 (“effortless action”), and as a vivid simile for human virtue in Mengzi 孟子. Its dual meaning reflects water’s perpetual motion, valued both as a natural phenomenon and a moral exemplar.

We will examine shui in its philosophical prominence alongside ancient understandings of hydrogeography, meteorology, cosmology, and water management. Bridging philosophy and technical knowledge, the workshop fosters dialogue between scholars of these often-separated traditions. By crossing the boundaries between disciplines, we aim to recover a more complete picture of how the ancients lived with, learned from, and managed water.

Organisation and Contact

Francesca Puglia
Richard King

Funding