Okay, I'm having one of those moments that makes me question my ability to use a computer.  This is not the sort of question I imagined asking as my first SO post, but here goes.
Started on Zed's new "Learn Python the Hard Way" since I've been looking to get back into programming after a 10 year hiatus and python was always what I wanted.  This book has really spoken to me.  That being said, I'm having a serious issue with pydoc from the command.  I've got all the directories in c:/python26 in my system path and I can execute pydoc from the command line just fine regardless of pwd - but it accepts no arguments.  Doesn't matter what I type, I just get the standard pydoc output telling me the acceptable arguments.  
Any ideas?  For what it's worth, I installed ActivePython as per Zed's suggestion.
C:\Users\Chevee>pydoc file
pydoc - the Python documentation tool
pydoc.py <name> ...
    Show text documentation on something.  <name> may be the name of a
    Python keyword, topic, function, module, or package, or a dotted
    reference to a class or function within a module or module in a
    package.  If <name> contains a '\', it is used as the path to a
    Python source file to document. If name is 'keywords', 'topics',
    or 'modules', a listing of these things is displayed.
pydoc.py -k <keyword>
    Search for a keyword in the synopsis lines of all available modules.
pydoc.py -p <port>
    Start an HTTP server on the given port on the local machine.
pydoc.py -g
    Pop up a graphical interface for finding and serving documentation.
pydoc.py -w <name> ...
    Write out the HTML documentation for a module to a file in the current
    directory.  If <name> contains a '\', it is treated as a filename; if
    it names a directory, documentation is written for all the contents.
C:\Users\Chevee>
EDIT:  New information, pydoc  works just fine in PowerShell.  As a linux user, I have no idea why I'm trying to use cmd anyways--but I'd still love to figure out what's up with pydoc and cmd.
EDIT 2:  More new information.  In cmd...
c:\>python c:/python26/lib/pydoc.py file
...works just fine.  Everything works just fine with just pydoc in PowerShell without me worrying about pwd, or extensions or paths.