Papers 000–004 established the minimal architecture of determinate persistence under real transformation, its universal real instantiation, the LP phase space, the admissibility dynamics governing trajectories within that space, and the topology of reversibility and irreversibility generated by those dynamics. The present paper derives the structural closure of the LP system. The question is no longer whether persistent systems instantiate the LP architecture, nor whether admissible trajectories, boundaries, or irreversible regions exist. The question is whether the LP architecture itself is structurally complete: whether the primitive conditions and derived structures established across the Foundation Series jointly exhaust the persistence problem without requiring additional primitive principles. This paper establishes five results. First, the LP system possesses a finite primitive basis. Distinguishability, real transformation, and determinable persistence relations generate the complete persistence architecture without additional primitive structural principles. Second, the structures derived across Papers 000–004 form a closed derivational hierarchy: architecture, geometry, dynamics, and topology are not independent layers but successive structural consequences of the same admissibility structure. Third, several concepts commonly treated as primitive in persistence-related discourse — stability, fragility, resilience, reversibility, collapse, recovery, and structural memory — are derived LP structures rather than independent explanatory categories. Fourth, LP possesses explicit scope limits. LP derives the structural conditions under which persistence is admissible. It does not derive empirical mechanisms, concrete material realizations, or domain-specific causal implementations. Fifth, no additional persistence-relevant primitive structure exists within the LP admissibility class. Any proposed extension either reduces to existing LP structures, is persistence-irrelevant, or falls outside the persistence problem itself. These three categories are exhaustive. The LP persistence architecture is therefore structurally closed. Methodological Note on Claim Classification This paper adopts the four-tier classification established in Paper 000: Theorem (Class A): formally derivable. Structural Consequence (Class B): forced under stated structural conditions. Interpretive Corollary (Class C): conceptual identification. Ontological Consequence (Class C): scope statement.
Marc Maibom (Wed,) studied this question.