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"Intuition" here means "direct cognition".
We can only assume that different individual perspectives yield different individual cognitions. A collective intelligence also has a perspective -- a perspective that emerges from the confluence of the perspectives of its individual members. Similarly, in a functioning collective intelligence, the members, too, must have some awareness of the collective's distinct perspective. It is not sufficient that the members use the same jargon; it is, however, essential that certain understandings -- certain intuitions about certain realities -- be shared.
We've just noted that it's not sufficient for members of a collective intelligence to use the same jargon, because if they don't also share some intuitions about reality, then they can't function both collectively and intelligently, except perhaps by accident. Interestingly, Topic Maps can help the members of a collective intelligence to gain a common understandings without first sharing or agreeing upon a common jargon. Therefore, with Topic Maps, a common jargon is not even necessary for a group of individuals to act as a collective intelligence.