Neil deGrasse Tyson was born on October 5, 1958, in Manhattan, the middle of three children of Cyril Tyson, a sociologist who worked for Mayor John Lindsay's administration, and Sunchita Tyson, a gerontologist. He grew up in the Bronx and experienced what he describes as a powerful moment at age nine when his mother took him to the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City for the first time — the night sky projected on the planetarium dome struck him as so beautiful and so impossibly vast that he decided on the spot that the universe was the thing he needed to dedicate his life to understanding. He began building a name for himself in astronomy circles while still in high school, taking classes at the Hayden Planetarium and winning an essay contest whose prize was a trip to a rural observatory in the Mojave Desert to observe the 1973 solar eclipse.
He attended Harvard for his undergraduate degree in physics and went on to study at the University of Texas Austin before completing his PhD in astrophysics at Columbia University in 1991. He joined the staff of the Hayden Planetarium in 1994 and became its director in 1996 — a role that positioned him in the physical space that had launched his vocation, with the institutional authority to share the night sky with new generations of New Yorkers. His role in the International Astronomical Union's 2006 decision to reclassify Pluto from planet to dwarf planet — he had displayed it differently in the Hayden Planetarium from 2000 — generated a volume of outraged mail from children that he documents with evident pride as evidence that the public cares passionately about the cosmos.
Tyson's public career as a science communicator accelerated dramatically in the 2010s. His hosting of Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey (2014), a sequel to Carl Sagan's landmark 1980 Cosmos series, reached an estimated 135 million people in 181 countries and became the most widely watched science documentary series in television history. His StarTalk podcast and television program — which frames scientific discussions in conversation with comedians and celebrities — reflected his systematic approach to public science communication: science is inherently interesting, but the frame of entertainment makes it accessible to people who have been taught to think it isn't for them. His social media presence, particularly on Twitter/X, has made him the most-followed scientist in the world.
Tyson's ENTP quality is most visible in his fundamental professional mission: the systematic challenge to the cognitive biases and factual misconceptions that prevent people from engaging accurately with scientific reality. He corrects errors publicly and specifically, whether the error appears in a blockbuster film's portrayal of the night sky (he famously identified the wrong star configuration in James Cameron's Titanic and Cameron subsequently corrected it in the director's cut), a politician's claim about astronomy, or a journalist's misstatement about cosmology. This is the ENTP in its most educational form: the person who cannot let the incorrect statement pass unchallenged because accuracy, for them, is not a preference but a value. His debates with skeptics and his willingness to defend unpopular scientific consensus positions reflect the same quality: a genuine relish for intellectual contest in service of truth.