More thinner lams are more work and cost, but are stronger and smoother. Glue lines are good in laminates, but must be laid up with the right pressure and enough epoxy.
If you don't get enough taper, all the bend will be at the fade-outs. That will cause hand shock, noise, and loss of performance. Your taper comes from the bow width (back profile), and limb thickness taper. You have to find what works best for your design. If you are building a wide limb design, you may get by with no thickness taper. If your limbs are very narrow, you may need .005-.006/inch taper in your lam stack. You need to get most of the limb bending. The last 8-10" of the tip should stay pretty straight at full draw.
My mild R/D longbows are 1 1/4-1 5/16" wide and have four .001 tapered lams. Most don't use that much taper though, but I need it to get the limb bending.