Let $X = P^{n-1}(\Bbb C)$ ($(n-1)$-dimensional projective space) with $n \geq 3$, and let $K \subset X$ denote a compact subset. I have a bijective, continuous map $\phi:K \to K$ which satisfies the condition $$ \hat u + \hat v \supset \hat w \implies \phi(\hat u) + \phi(\hat v) \supset \phi(\hat w) \tag{1} $$ for all $\hat u,\hat v,\hat w \in P^{n-1}(\Bbb C)$. Here, I am interpreting $\hat u \in P^{n-1}(\Bbb C)$ to be a $1$-dimensional subspace of $\Bbb C^n$, so that $\hat u + \hat v$ is the smallest subspace containing both $\hat u$ and $\hat v$.
The question is as follows: can I guarantee that $\phi$ will have an extension $\Phi:X \to X$ which satisfies (1) for all $\hat u,\hat v, \hat w \in X$?
The motivation here is that, by the fundamental theorem of projective geometry, such a map $\Phi$ is necessarily induced by a semilinear map; it would be nice if I could guarantee that $\phi$ is induced by such a map. If anyone could point me in the direction of a theorem or reference that might be useful here, I'd appreciate it.
Note: I've done my best to make this question self-contained and concise, and have therefore left out background that I felt was extraneous. Feel free to comment if you feel that I should provide further context or clarification