So why on Earth then don´t you connect your textbook informations to the astronomical and cosmological area which concerns my Plasma Cosmology instead of linking to the basic knowledge of the 4 states I already knew of?
When I was changing my career path from civil engineering to computer science, it was over 18 years since I studied Year 12 high school physics, chemistry and maths. I no longer have any textbooks my high school days in the early 80s.
So I did Advanced Diploma course, which involved both computer and applied physics, to refresh my maths and physics knowledge, BEFORE I started my bachelor in computer science
The physics textbooks that I used in 1995, by Raymond Serway, the full title being - Physics For Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics. I have to go over everything I studied in high school physics, mostly focusing on classical mechanics, electricity, electromagnetism, optics, that would applied to my studies in computer science.
But the course didn’t touch modern physics fields like Relativity, Quantum Mechanics, Particle Physics, and anything on astronomy and astrophysics, let alone the Big Bang cosmology, because they weren’t required reading in computer science.
The only thing remotely covering “space”, was electromagnetism, for examples, satellite network communication.
I only revisited my physics textbook, after graduating in 1999, was in 2004 to the present, reading the other section of my textbook - modern physics - during my free times.
Only then did I learn other things relating to cosmology, especially with Relativity, Quantum Mechanics and Particle Physics.
As to the Big Bang cosmology, I learned these from NASA and ESA websites, in the education section on the Universe and the Big Bang cosmology, especially those CMBR data relating to space missions of the NASA Hubble & WMAP and ESA’s Planck.
You accuse me of using Wikipedia about the 4 states of physical matters. I do use wiki, but I do have other materials at home and non-wiki sources. As to gas, fluid, solid and plasma, I learned back in high school chemistry and physics, that predated my textbooks by Raymond Serway.
As to your questions about plasma cosmology or the Electric Universe, these are not science, not scientific theories, so I pretty much doubt you would any astrophysics textbooks covering your favorite pseudoscience cosmology.
Textbooks don’t usually print untested hypotheses and any untested non-scientific concepts.