It depends.
If you put two speakers, "stacked" one on top of the other, you have made yourself sort of a line array, which has some advantages, particularly with regard to imaging. Put the top speaker upsidedown so the tweeters are adjacent. At one time "stacked Advents" was a highly regarded and relatively inexpensive speaker system. (Roughly $600 for four, if I remember correctly). Apart from line array imaging advantages, the objective was not 6dB more loudness, but rather half the power into each speaker.
If you put the speakers side by side, you might have a problem, but if they are good speakers each side by side pair will image as one speaker between them, so things might be OK. This is the sort of thing that you need to try out, as theory doesn't always give the best answer.
If you put two speakers, "stacked" one on top of the other, you have made yourself sort of a line array, which has some advantages, particularly with regard to imaging. Put the top speaker upsidedown so the tweeters are adjacent. At one time "stacked Advents" was a highly regarded and relatively inexpensive speaker system. (Roughly $600 for four, if I remember correctly). Apart from line array imaging advantages, the objective was not 6dB more loudness, but rather half the power into each speaker.
If you put the speakers side by side, you might have a problem, but if they are good speakers each side by side pair will image as one speaker between them, so things might be OK. This is the sort of thing that you need to try out, as theory doesn't always give the best answer.