It's interesting you say that Rick! (Actually, I agree with a personal reservation or two.) Ballistically, the answer is whatever:
(a) has the lowest i7 'form factor' value (ie design that gives the lowest airdrag when compared to the G7 reference projectile shape or 'form'). ...... allied to
(b) highest bullet weight (strictly speaking, sectional density). Two bullets with the same i7 value but of different weights and fired at equivalent speeds (identical ME produced), always sees the heavier model suffer less wind drift.
(c) best suits the cartridge, barrel, and chamber in terms of precision and MV within acceptable pressures.
Taking (a) and (b), the 215gn Hybrid is inevitably the clear 'winner' from the OP's list given its staggeringly low 0.910 i7 value (9% lower draq than the G7 reference) compared to 0.988 for the 155.5gn BT Fullbore, 0.953 for the 168gn Hybrid, 0.999 for the 175gn LRBT, and 0.985 for the 185gn Juggernaut. Add in the weight / SD and whichever way you run it, it must move less in the wind at equivalent speeds.
Well, so much for the 'hard facts'. The trend in recent years is for people to concentrate heavily on the ballistics given QuickLOAD and Bryan's material, PM ballistic solver programs, the excellent Berger website ballistics program and so on. We can all play at being armchair ballistics experts now, never going near a range.
BUT ........ if the bullet doesn't perform in your barrel, or it produces more recoil and torque than you're happy with, the value of its comparative external ballistics' superiority are devalued. Then there is the 'flexibility issue'. Throat the barrel for a modern long 155 seated shallowly in the case and you can happily use every bullet design on the market up to 185/190gn levels, even the Berger 210gn LRBT seated a tad on the deep side. I know more UK FTR competitors with this set-up than the rest put together. Whilst many top US competitors might load the 185gn Berger Juggernaut as the default in this scenario, it tends to be the 155.5 here with 210gn LRBT for rough conditions.
Choose the 215 or 230 and you produce a one, or two-bullet rifle, the throat so long it degrades performance with almost everything else. If you can't get these to shoot in your barrel, you're stuffed! (Been there, got that tee shirt!) Or, if the gun handling with uber-heavies doesn't suit your shooting style, you're also stuffed!
Shooting off Dan Pahlobel's FLEX-bipod (fantastic design that far too many people write off as impractical without even trying one) and a really stiff and heavy Gator rear bag packed with Chromite heavy sand, I've gone full circle from 155s to 210 and the 215 Hybrid and back again. I've sold every bullet that weighed more than 190gn and generally either shoot the 155.5gn BT or 168gn Hybrid. I can feel the extra gun movement and torque going up from 155 at 3,050 to the 168 at ~2,900. The latter has become my 'heavy' (and a superb shooter it is too if you can tune its load and jump, a bit 'picky', I've found), but the 155.5gn is the default choice for me. Another individual with different kit and shooting style will likely come to different conclusions.
I was one of the first GB shooters to adopt the 185 Juggernaut, back when not even that many US shooters knew much about it. (Happy days - shooter ignorance meant that they were actually in stock most of the time, not like recent times!) My experience was that at ~2,800 fps MV and in a 10" twist barrel, it held 1,000 yard elevations in rough conditions better than anything else I've used in 308. I love the 185's performance, but am aware of the extra recoil over the 155/168, so rarely use it these days.
These are tuneability / shootability issues. There is another factor that the ballistics print-outs can't tell you about. Assuming you've got the terminal velocity needed at the longest range you shoot over (1.2 MACH) and the wind drift figures are at least reasonable, I don't think every bullet performs equally well at 1,000 yards. There seem to be intangible factors (not very scientific I know), that see design A work out better than design B - or vice versa - despite what the armchair ballistics and loads planning says will happen.
I reckon that every now and then, only once or twice in a generation even, an outstanding design appears that performs better 'than it should' or suits more actual on the range conditions more of the time, and/or suits more velocity and twist rate combinations than comparable models. 30 odd years ago it was the 155gn Sierra, the original 'Palma' #2155. Today, it's the 155.5gn Berger Fullbore and 185gn Juggernaut. The 200 or 215gn Hybrids may or may not turn out to be outstanding all-rounders too, but I can't speak from personal experience. Although I see a few individuals doing really well with them, it is only a few. That of course is in the conditions we see in the UK - shoot at Phoenix AZ and see 10 mph plus crosswind shifts between shots and I'd likely be building a rifle for the 230gn Hybrid!
So, for advice to a begginer FTR shooter, I'd say start with the 155.5 and get it to group really well with small ES / SD values at 3,050 fps of higher MVs and/or the Juggernaut at 2,750 fps minimum, better still ~2,800-2,825 fps. How this pair fit in with a 0.170" FB chamber? Not a clue - I tell my gunsmith, a personal friend and fellow 'Effer', that I want my usual set-up to shoot both 155s and the Juggernaut, and I've no idea what the actual FB value is.