Hal has something there with the eye contact. I think many people don't even realize the extent to which they are themselves 'lying' in social situations. False or mindless compliments you don't mean, laughing at banal jokes, saying you just love that band, putting on the persona of a 14 (or 55) year-old, strongly declaring 'opinions' that have not been thought out, strongly declaring 'emotions' that have not been reflected upon, invoking false bonds of kinship over superficialities, trying to be generally 'likable' to people at the expense of showing what you really think about the world or them (lie by omission)-- all are forms of dishonesty. Some people just can't stomach the masquerade. Others learn to exploit it. Others (myself included) are skilled actors, with a closet full of many other people's skins, though they long for the day when the lines and the costumes are unnecessary... at least not the ones that are no fun to say or wear...
That we presume people directly tell us anything at all about themselves in polite conversation is a fallacy. Anyone of any psychological skill knows the devil is in the details of the subtext. A good actor/expoiter makes eye contact and tells the other person what they are (what they should be) thinking with their reactions.
Eye contact- well that leaves you open to manipulation. If you know you're no good at this game, best to opt out. Or tell all.
Followup to: Belief in Belief
One of those insights that made me sit upright and say "Aha!" From The Uncredible Hallq:
The power of real deception - outright lies - is easy for even us nerds to understand.
The notion of a lie that the other person knows is a lie, seems very odd at first. Up until I read the Hallq's explanation of Pinker, I had thought in terms of people suppressing uncomfortable thoughts: "If it isn't said out loud, I don't have to deal with it."
Like the friends of a terminal patient, whose disease has progressed to a stage that - if you look it up online - turns out to be nearly universally fatal. So the friends gather around, and wish the patient best hopes for their medical treatment. No one says, "Well, we all know you're going to die; and now it's too late for you to get life insurance and sign up for cryonics. I hope it isn't too painful; let me know if you want me to smuggle you a heroin overdose."
So even that is possible for a nerd to understand - in terms of, as Vassar puts it, thinking of non-nerds as defective nerds...
But the notion of a lie that the other person knows is a lie, but they aren't sure that you know they know it's a lie, and so the social situation occupies a different state from common knowledge...
I think that's the closest I've ever seen life get to imitating a Raymond Smullyan logic puzzle.
Added: Richard quotes Nagel on a further purpose of mutual hypocrisy: preventing an issue from rising to the level where it must be publicly acknowledged and dealt with, because common ground on that issue is not easily available.