Something a Bit More Complex
This is a relatively simple HTML document. Simple
is in the eye of the beholder, but if you study what is included
in this beginner's guide, you can create documents like this
with no problem!
Special Effects (header 2)
The second paragraph shows some special effects: a
word in italics and a word in bold.
Here is an inlined GIF image:
.
This is the third paragraph, which demonstrates links. A hypertext link
from the word me!
to a document called "big5/index.html" exists but if you
try to follow this link, you will get an error screen.
A Bit of Poetry (header 2)
Here is a section of text that should display in a
fixed-width font when it is formatted:
A List (header 2)
This is a unordered list of my favorite fruit:
る ら 0:07:56
- (year) る (month) ら(day) (:) 2004年5月31日
- 点 (hour) 分 (minute) 秒 (second) (:) 15点0分0秒
- [(water)(水)( ¤ô ) 杠()]
- [(sun)(日)( ¤é ) ゅ ()]
- [(air)(氣)( ô ) て ()]
The central aim of science is prediction 1 hypothesis, 2 theory, and3 justify.
Social Choice, Welfare Distributions, and Poverty
Amartya Sen has made several key contributions to the research on
fundamental problems in welfare economics. His contributions range
from axiomatic theory of social choice, over definitions of welfare and
poverty indexes, to empirical studies of famine. They are tied closely
together by a general interest in distributional issues and a particular
interest in the most impoverished members of society. Sen has clarified
the conditions which permit aggregation of individual values into
collective decisions, and the conditions which permit rules for collective
decision making that are consistent with a sphere of rights for the
individual. By analyzing the available information about different
individuals' welfare when collective decisions are made, he has improved
the theoretical foundation for comparing different distributions of
society's welfare and defined new, and more satisfactory, indexes of
poverty. In empirical studies, Sen's applications of his theoretical
approach have enhanced our understanding of the economic mechanisms
underlying famines.
14 October 1998
You're Done! (header 2)
This is the end of the longer sample document.
Howard ([email protected])