MBTI
The 16 personality types — through the lens of the zodiac
About MBTI
The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator sorts personality along four dichotomies: where you draw energy (Extraversion / Introversion), how you take in information (Sensing / Intuition), how you decide (Thinking / Feeling), and how you organize your outer life (Judging / Perceiving). The four letters combine into 16 personality types, each with its own characteristic strengths, blind spots, and ways of relating to other people.
Astrology and MBTI describe overlapping territory in different vocabularies. A sign tells you about temperament — which qualities feel natural, which don't. MBTI tells you about cognitive style — how you process the world. Reading your sign through the MBTI lens often clarifies why two people of the same zodiac sign can still feel different in conversation.
The 16 MBTI types
The Architect
Strategic, independent, and quietly ambitious.
The Logician
Curious, theoretical, and gently rebellious.
The Commander
Driven, strategic, and built for momentum.
The Debater
Inventive, restless, and addicted to the next idea.
The Advocate
Quiet, principled, and quietly seeing right through you.
The Mediator
Idealistic, gentle, and quietly stubborn about values.
The Protagonist
Warm, persuasive, and built for people work.
The Campaigner
Enthusiastic, big-hearted, and chasing the next possibility.
The Logistician
Reliable, thorough, and quietly indispensable.
The Defender
Warm, practical, and protective of the people you love.
The Executive
Direct, organised, and built to run things.
The Consul
Warm, social, and the glue of any community.
The Virtuoso
Practical, observant, and quietly excellent with their hands.
The Adventurer
Quiet, sensitive, and deeply present in their own world.
The Entrepreneur
Bold, present, and built for high-stakes moments.
The Entertainer
Warm, vivid, and impossible to ignore in any room.
MBTI through each zodiac sign
Source
Isabel Briggs Myers & Katharine Cook Briggs · Gifts Differing: Understanding Personality Type · 1980
Personality frameworks are tools for self-reflection, not diagnostic instruments. For mental-health concerns, please consult a licensed professional.