I'm super curious in a good way about the idea that when one apprehends metaphysics one can't help but apprehend morality, that Being is necessarily moral. I'm probably not wording any of that right. I'm trying to frame the question in terms in which I can conceive or imagine understanding the answer. And if I can't understand the answer, I still have to start someplace.
I believe morality is rational for society, that society is somehow unimaginable without morality. If we humans are all of equal value, then to be overly selfish can only be wrong. In other words, all else being equal, a person among a group of 10 logically assumes each person should get 1/10 of the pie. Wanting more than a 1/0 is not logical.
I don't see a ladder from there to morality as an ontic or ontological entity, as the foundation of Being itself.
If you can say how you see morality as fundamental to Being (or whatever the right words are) I'd be very grateful and appreciative.