Hi. My understanding is that twice the power will yield an extra 3dB, and ten times the power will yield 10dB. I think that most people equate an increase of 10dB as being twice as loud.
Your 0dB point is some reference level (if you ran auto calibration on your system) which is around 80dB. So, -60dB should equate to a sound level of around 20dB wherever you had the calibration mic located.
The thing throwing off your understanding is this: at -60dB, you aren't using 10W/channel. No where near that. If your speakers output, say, 90dB at 1W/1m, then at one meter away from a speaker, it will be 90dB if you put 1W through it. So, 80dB at 0.1W, 70dB at 0.01W...and so on until you get down to the level required for your ~20dB output at the mic location. 20dB at that location is a function of multiple speakers, all of which are probably more than one meter away. So, it's more math - but the short story is that it's much, much less than 10W.
EDIT: I must have started typing right when Fuzz was posting.