There are two common approaches taken in introductory texts on Lie groups: studying all Lie groups, or focusing only on matrix Lie groups. The main advantage of the latter approach is that one can deal with very concrete notions of matrix exponential and logarithms and avoid the much more abstract exponential for general Lie groups, while the main disadvantages are that the universal cover of a matrix Lie group need not be matrix and that it's difficult to show that analytic subgroups of a matrix Lie group are matrix Lie groups.
It seems to me that if instead one considered locally matrix Lie groups, then you get the advantages of the concrete matrix group approach without any of the disadvantages. One obvious objection is that locally matrix Lie groups might seem like an unmotivated definition, but it should be possible to motivate them nicely using the fact that manifolds are themselves defined by local properties so it's counterintuitive to focus on matrix Lie groups which are defined by a global property.
My question is twofold:
- Are there any introductory texts that take this approach of looking only at locally matrix Lie groups?
- Are there any problems with this approach that I've overlooked?