Agreed. 'The West' has not always been dominant. It only seems so because 'The West' is currently dominant and the current versions of historical discourse therefore are mainly written with an emphasis on the events of 'The West'. There have also been phases when Arabic and Eastern civilizations were dominant due to their emphasis on trade and commerce, meritocracy and secular societal values (e.g. confucianism) and greater societal respect for artists and philosophers over religious men, but these phases are not emphasised today because the West is currently dominating.sthcross.dude said:Did you ever think economic reasons such as our exploitation of the third world might have something to do with Christian countries happening to be so prosperous. Remember that the economies of the United States and the British Empire at its height were built on slavery and exploitation and we are still exploiting the non christian countires today.
Also look at the emergence of China as an economic and military superpower. This has occured under secularism. It has nothing do with religion, China sucked because it was communist and trade liberalisation has made it far more successful. Once again simple ecconomic reasons are the explaination, not religion.
ALso what about Japan, one of the worlds most successful nations. Christinity has been neither a model or a reformer.
I think it is no coincidence that the dominant phases of Western civilization correlates with its most secular phases. The rational emphasis pervasive during the Roman Empire (compared with the superstitious Celtic and Barbarian cultures) and the Enlightenment (compared with the mysticism of the Dark Ages), and even Western society today (compared with the theocracies in the middle east) are examples of the superiority of secular civilization over religious civilization.
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