No - the channel number assigned should better understood as the central channel in a spread spectrum system. So, if you are nominally on channel 6, you are actually transmitting across 4 & 5 (and 6) + 7 & 8. The same for channel 1 (-1, 0, 1, 2, 3) and 11 (9, 10, 11, 12 & 13)
Take a look here at the non-overlapping channels diagram :https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_WLAN_channels
It's fairly widely accepted that for proper separation / avoidance of co-channel interference, you need to be 5 channels away. A quick glance reminds me though that some vendors try to squeeze 4 non-overlapping channels out of 13, by using 4-channel separation: 1, 5, 9, 13 but this does still involve some channel overlap and channels 12 and 13 aren't available (or at least, not available without further restrictions) in some jurisdictions - notably the US.
As per my first comment, an AP on 8 and a nearby AP on 6 will definitely be interfering with each other, to some degree, even if you're using the looser 4-channel separation model (which Meraki does not recommend).
Notice too they took a different approach with 5 GHz, though it works much the same: you can only select 40, 44, 48 etc. You cannot even choose to configure APs for (say) channel 41 - at least, not in any of the vendors' kit I've worked with.