Asia is heavily influenced by Western culture nowadays though. And even if one side emerges victorious over the other, I don't think we could attribute it to their belief systems mostly. The majority of China, for instance, is irreligious, and it's quite common for people to only turn to religious-type practices (mostly traditional/folk religion and Buddhism) for things like funeral rites, for the sake of tradition.
Edited this one in here.
I'm not saying we can attribute it to belief systems mostly, just that some things can be attributed to belief systems. It's not terribly surprising that China is irreligious - they recently implemented Communism and that ideology in particular is quite anti-religious. I don't think, however, that the ideas that were in their religious traditions have died out just because they stopped identifying with those religions, though those ideas have likely eroded, they likely remain effectual. I can't say for sure, of course, but I do know that among American atheists at least, myself included, generally Christian behaviors prevail.
Except that post does explain it... Mercantilism developed in the Middle Ages because all the tiny little kingdoms lacked resources and consequently competed in trade wars. On the other hand, China was a large empire, with plenty of resources, and natural geographical borders on all sides. They also had plenty of room to expand in a western frontier, so there was no need to establish colonies overseas. Furthermore, a century of foreign rule led to xenophobia and distrust of foreigners.
Ninja edit: looks like Elbbsas beat me to this part.
That still doesn't explain it, you again have titanic forces composed of hundreds of thousands of people colliding in complicated ways.. It still doesn't tell you much about how much or how little individual behavior contributed to what was happening.
I'm not too sure that's accurate. The Pax Mongolica lasted for about one and a half centuries before a gradual decline and collapse, in large part due to the Black Death ending trade and making administration over long distances difficult.
It's true that the Mongols were very successful, and there's a lot to be said for it. I would wonder how the individual behavior and beliefs of people in the Mongol civilization impacted their successes. Certainly their tolerance for other belief systems contributed to their success, and I think that's a useful gem for us to admire in today's day and age where it is perhaps even more important.
My issue is that you were drawing arguably racist/supremacist conclusions from an assumption that likely isn't even true. Much as with the "there are only two genders" debate, while I believe most people on all sides to be well-intentioned, and while I'd certainly switch sides if the evidence were there, I'd vastly prefer our null hypothesis to be the one that doesn't unintentionally prejudice against certain groups.
I agree, as I pointed out before I don't think that Eastern civilization is worse or better than Western, they both remain, after all, extant, so I think it's unfair to say I was drawing that conclusion. Especially since I haven't yet drawn any conclusions at all. East Asian culture (particularly Chinese culture) is remarkably cohesive and is by a large margin the oldest civilization in existence, and deserves a lot of respect for that, and I have no doubt that the West has a lot to learn from their belief systems.
What I'm trying to figure out a way to figure out what individual behavior should be in order to produce successful societies, so I can be a productive cog in that machine, and, for me, that machine is Western Civilization (though globalization is making this claim more and more false even on its own). In order to do that, I want to try to figure out, from the perspective of individual choices, what has made Western Civilization successful. I don't think that there's nothing good about the belief systems in the West, and I want to find out what the good is. Christianity is very influential in this area, so I think there's a lot of good to be found there.