Soldato
I do see what you’re saying, but I just can’t get on board with attributing ‘West is best’ to Christianity being the predominant religion. It disregards so many other aspects of global human development and it surprises me that someone of JP’s calibre appears to actively ignore this (although as I stated earlier in the thread, it may be a cynical attempt to appeal to his primary target audience).
In 'Talking to My Daughter About the Economy', Yanis Varoufakis makes the argument that the propensity for the agricultural (and industrial) revolution in the West had a lot more to do with geography than any specific human traits. In 'Outliers', Malcolm Gladwell argues that Asians tend to do better in Maths than Westerners, partly because of their language and partly because of the 'cultural legacy' of growing rice which is heavily labour intensive and requires very specific growing conditions. Ironically, this benefit when it comes to Maths (which is often incorrectly assumed to be a sign of 'genetic intelligence') doesn't lend itself to global expansion unlike wheat, which doesn't require as much man-management and will grow in a much wider range of soil and climate conditions.
Both rice- and wheat-growing cultures share aspects of creation myths and moral fables. I don't accept that the myths from the wheat-growing cultures are somehow more 'real' because they spread further and faster due to an arbitrary factor that had nothing to do with the myths themselves.
If you were really seeking out 'The Truth' of the human condition via meta-stories and archetypes, why limit yourself to just the Western interpretation of those stories? Surely a global view would be much more interesting and much closer to 'The Truth' instead of just 'The Western Truth' — but then I come back to JP writing for his audience.
I see what you're saying too. To play devil's advocate, I think it's partly because 'best' for him is largely to do with the Western emphasis on the sovereignty of the individual, creating most of the societies where individuals have been able to flourish the most, and how this environment has best facilitated a willingness to engage with new knowledge and the development of new ideas... and partly because there's only so much time for a human being to learn something and he's clearly devoted more time to one particular branch of theology than others.